Jan
05

Sony Honda Mobility Afeela car will debut in 2026 with Qualcomm tech

Sony announced that its Sony Honda Mobility car will debut in 2026 using Qualcomm technology.Read More

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Jan
05

Sony Playstation VR will launch with at least 30 titles

Sony PlayStation chief Jim Ryan said the PlayStation VR will launch with at least 30 titles, including a newly announced VR version of Gran Turismo.Read More

  32 Hits
Jan
05

Sony unveils Project Leonardo, a new controller for accessible gaming

Sony PlayStation chief Jim Ryan said that the company will launch Project Leonardo, a new controller designed for gamers with limited mobility.Read More

  26 Hits
Jan
05

Sony shows racing footage from Gran Turismo movie coming in August — and GT is coming to PSVR 2

Sony showed off some footage of its Gran Turismo racing movie coming out on August 11. The execs in charge of the movie, including director Neill Blomkamp (District 9) showed off the racing footage from the high-octane movie. The film is based on a true story about a gamer who played the Gran Turismo series (which goes back 25 years) which inspired…Read More

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Jan
05

Withings’ U-Scan lets you do urinalysis at home on a daily basis

Withings announced U-Scan, a breakthrough product that lets you do urinalysis at home. No need to pee in a cup.Read More

  24 Hits
Jan
05

Aska A5 is a flying electric car that can take off vertically

The prototype of the Aska A5 electric flying car, which can do a vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL), made its debut at CES 2023.Read More

  26 Hits
Jan
04

Paula Abdul launches smart audio glasses

Entertainment celebrity Paula Abdul today announced the launch of her Paula Abdul Signature Smart Audio Glasses today at CES 2023.Read More

  26 Hits
Jan
04

Same As It Ever Was

When I was in college in the 1980s, David Byrne and the Talking Heads were in regular rotation in my room along with Pink Floyd, except for the one semester where the only thing I listed to was Dark Side of the Moon (ah – the joy of discovering repeat on an early CD player.)

Once in a Lifetime was one of my favorites. Looking back, it was a Gen X anthem.

Mark Goldstein sent me an email this morning titled your blog, an article i was in last week and yep in response to my post What Just Happened. It included the phrase “same as it ever was…same as it ever was.” and a link to The Internet Is Kmart Now from The Atlantic.

Amy had texted me the article mid-December when it came out. It starts strong.

The 1990s hadn’t gone as expected. A bad recession kicked off Gen X’s adulthood, along with a war in the Middle East and the fall of communism. Boomers came to power in earnest in America, and then the lead Boomer got impeached for lying about getting a blow job from an intern in the Oval Office. Grunge had come and gone, along with clove cigarettes and bangs. The taste of the ’90s still lingers, for those of us who lived it as young adults rather than as Kenny G listeners or Pokémon-card collectors, but the decade also ingrained a sense that expressing that taste would be banal, a fate that the writer David Foster Wallace had made worse than death (I swear he was cool once, along with U2).

yep. Thankfully SiriusXM has Channel 34: Lithium.

The article uses the Kmart / Bluelight.com / Spinway story to set up the conclusion. We were in the middle of it (Softbank Venture Capital/Mobius invested in Bluelight.com and Spinway.) Ian Bogost mostly gets the story right. And then, he ends the article as strongly as he started.

Today, the collapse of a big technology or retail company is almost unthinkable. Just look at the pearl-clutching over Twitter’s recent shambles: The public can’t fathom the idea that it might decline, let alone possibly die, for real. But the certainty of death, rather than the hubris of assumed eternity, was the salient cosmic feeling of the 1990s internet. Its creators had learned that sentiment from the Cold War, tapping out time on Atari games about the apocalypse while awaiting its real-world counterpart. Of course Kmart died, and Yahoo too. What else could have happened? “We’re all going to be absorbed; we’re all going to be consolidated,” Goldstein said. “At the end of the day, we just hope to end up as a button that survives.”

Yep. Same as it ever was.

The post Same As It Ever Was appeared first on Brad Feld.

  34 Hits
Jan
03

LG infuses AI deep learning in its latest OLED TVs for better picture quality

LG Electronics unveiled its 2023 TV lineup with a range of organic light-emitting diode (OLED) TVs that use AI processing.Read More

  60 Hits
Jan
02

Top 5 ways to maximize marketing budget profitability

Gone are the days of relying on intuition, luck, and frivolous spending. Marketing is now data-driven and about efficiency and creativity.Read More

  34 Hits
Jan
02

14 data predictions for enterprise growth in 2023

Key data predictions from industry experts and vendors to help enterprises drive growth with operational efficiency in 2023.Read More

  35 Hits
Jan
02

Why you should embrace the extended reality continuum

Why you should embrace extended reality (XR) as the anchor term for discussing mixed reality and virtual reality technologies.Read More

  51 Hits
Jan
02

My 13 favorite AI stories of 2022 | The AI Beat

As I rev up for all things AI in 2023, I wanted to take a quick look back at my favorite stories, large and small, that I covered in 2022.Read More

  31 Hits
Jan
02

What’s in store for cybersecurity in 2023

2023 is certain to be as action-packed a year in cybersecurity as 2022 was. Rubrik exec shares five predictions for the coming year.Read More

  28 Hits
Jan
02

2023 could be the year for large language models

Large language models (LLMs) will soon power generative features that will be transformative and change industries (and lives).Read More

  24 Hits
Jan
02

3 AI trends in drug discovery that stood out in 2022

Find out where AI made major contributions to drug discovery in 2022 — and what may be in store for AI in pharmacology in 2023.Read More

  41 Hits
Jan
02

Father and son help cryptocurrency owners recover their lost assets

Lost your Bitcoin account password? Your efforts to recover your funds might lead you to a father-and-son team dubbed Crypto Asset Recovery.Read More

  31 Hits
Jan
02

Npixel’s Gran Saga: Unlimited will be 1st game on the Aptos blockchain

Npixel's Gran Saga: Unlimited will be the first game to be published on the Aptos Network, a new Web3 platform.Read More

  24 Hits
Jan
02

What Just Happened

For those of you older than 40, it sort of felt like 2000.

If you are younger than 40, a massive tech bubble just burst. I expect you know that. For the past six months, many VCs have been podcasting, tweeting, publicly writing, … and generally prognosticating about what you should do and what’s going to happen next.

I think the best VCs didn’t prognosticate. They knew what was going to happen next. Instead, they worked with each company to help them deal with reality as it unfolded. Each company is different, and the dynamics of the bubble bursting were not generic.

For example, one of the companies I’m on the board of grew by over 30% last year. Its revenue grew by 30%+. Its gross margin grew by 30%+. Its EBITDA grew by 30%+. Its FCF, before debt service, grew by 30%+.

Another company had a revenue decline of 25%. However, their GM% increased, and their GM$ stayed roughly the same as the prior year. Their EBITDA loss decreased by 50%, and FCF was close to $0 in Q422.

I have 14 other stories from the companies in our portfolio that I’m responsible for. My partners have another 50+. Each one is different. Each one took a ton of work from the leadership team. Many of these teams took on a set of intense challenges as early as Q122 when it was clear that whatever was unfolding was not what they had just finished planning at the end of 2021 when they came up with their 2022 plans.

Almost all of the prognosticating I heard in 2022 was similar to what I heard and often said in 2000. I was 35 at the time and rationalized continually that things would magically and suddenly change for the better. I was wrong, and then 9/11 happened, and then Enron and Worldcom happened, and business kept getting worse. 2001 was a dreadful year for me. 2002 sucked, but it wasn’t as dreadful. But it still sucked. 2003 was hard. 2004 was the beginning of what I now refer to as “the grind,” which ended for me around 2007.

Nothing is going to magically and suddenly change for the better. No one is going to raise a $100 billion VC fund and start spraying money around at fantastical valuations, followed by everyone else suspending disbelief and believing companies, regardless of their businesses, are worth 50x next year’s revenue. No one will value a company with a GM% of 10% at the same as a company with a GM% of 80% just because they are growing revenue at the same rate. Boxes full of magic beans are going to result in jail time. Interest rates aren’t suddenly going back to 0%.

If you are a fan of Harry Potter, think of 2022 as the sorting ceremony. When you put the 2022 hat on your head, did you end up in Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, or Slytherin? Did you address reality early in 2022? Are you just now addressing reality? Are you considering what reality might be and hoping it doesn’t happen? Or are you looking around saying, “Huh, what?”

Whatever it is, there’s no looking back and hoping something different happens.

The post What Just Happened appeared first on Brad Feld.

  37 Hits
Jan
01

Square Enix refocuses on core games and sticks to blockchain investments

Square Enix President Yosuke Matsuda said in his annual letter that Square Enix is committed to growing its HD gaming business.Read More

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