Sunday, April 30, 2017
THE INTERNET OF THINGS 2017 REPORT: How the IoT is improving lives to transform the world
May 01, 2017 at 06:01AM
The Internet of Things (IoT) is disrupting businesses, governments, and consumers and transforming how they interact with the world. Companies are going to spend almost $5 trillion on the IoT in the next five years — and the proliferation of connected devices and massive increase in data has started an analytical revolution.
To gain insight into this emerging trend, BI Intelligence conducted an exclusive Global IoT Executive Survey on the impact of the IoT on companies around the world. The study included over 500 respondents from a wide array of industries, including manufacturing, technology, and finance, with significant numbers of C-suite and director-level respondents.
Through this exclusive study and in-depth research into the field, BI Intelligence details the components that make up IoT ecosystem. We size the IoT market in terms of device installations and investment through 2021. And we examine the importance of IoT providers, the challenges they face, and what they do with the data they collect. Finally, we take a look at the opportunities, challenges, and barriers related to mass adoption of IoT devices among consumers, governments, and enterprises.
Here are some key takeaways from the report:
- We project that there will be a total of 22.5 billion IoT devices in 2021, up from 6.6 billion in 2016.
- We forecast there will be $4.8 trillion in aggregate IoT investment between 2016 and 2021.
- It highlights the opinions and experiences of IoT decision-makers on topics that include: drivers for adoption; major challenges and pain points; stages of adoption, deployment, and maturity of IoT implementations; investment in and utilization of devices, platforms, and services; the decision-making process; and forward- looking plans.
In full, the report:
- Provides a primer on the basics of the IoT ecosystem
- Offers forecasts for the IoT moving forward and highlights areas of interest in the coming years
- Looks at who is and is not adopting the IoT, and why
- Highlights drivers and challenges facing companies implementing IoT solutions
To get your copy of this invaluable guide to the IoT, choose one of these options:
- Subscribe to an ALL-ACCESS Membership with BI Intelligence and gain immediate access to this report AND over 100 other expertly researched deep-dive reports, subscriptions to all of our daily newsletters, and much more. >> START A MEMBERSHIP
- Purchase the report and download it immediately from our research store. >> BUY THE REPORT
The choice is yours. But however you decide to acquire this report, you’ve given yourself a powerful advantage in your understanding of the IoT.
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Article: Recommended Reading: May 1, 2017
May 01, 2017 at 07:01AM
eMarketer’s scan of the key developments of the day, plus data to make sense of it all. Today’s topics: Amazon makes Alexa sound more human; SoftBank to invest over $1.5 billion in Paytm; and more.
Article: US Adults Now Spend 12 Hours 7 Minutes a Day Consuming Media
May 01, 2017 at 07:01AM
Thanks to the magic (or curse) of media multitasking, US adults will fit 12 hours 7 minutes of media usage into an average day this year, eMarketer estimates. That’s 3 minutes higher than last year’s figure.
Article: In Russia, Digital Buyers Prefer PCs
May 01, 2017 at 07:01AM
A recent survey found 70% of digital buyers in Russia ages 18 to 64 who own a smartphone said their most recent digital purchase was conducted with a desktop or laptop, while only 22% bought via smartphone.
Article: Competition Heats Up in China's Mobile Video Sector
May 01, 2017 at 07:01AM
China’s rapidly expanding mobile video market is creating a seemingly insatiable demand for mobile video content and services.
Bits: Daily Report: Time For Another Net Neutrality Fight
April 27, 2017 at 08:31PM
The F.C.C.’s chairman said high-speed internet access should no longer be regulated like a utility, reversing an Obama administration initiative.
Tech Tip: Let Your Fingers Do the Walking (Back)
April 27, 2017 at 07:23PM
If you’re tired of fumbling with the mouse to click the Back button on your browser to revisit the previous page, use a keyboard shortcut instead.
Amid Brick-and-Mortar Travails, a Tipping Point for Amazon in Apparel
May 01, 2017 at 02:13AM
Over the years, the online giant has picked off different retail businesses, from books to electronics. Now apparel sellers are starting to succumb.
Detailing Amazon’s Custom-Clothing Patent
May 01, 2017 at 02:06AM
Amazon recently received an intriguing patent for an “on demand” apparel manufacturing system, which can quickly fill online orders for suits, dresses and shirts.
MPs want tech giants to pay the police to find antisemitic and neo-Nazi content online (GOOG, FB, TWTR)
May 01, 2017 at 02:01AM
UK politicians have said that Google, Twitter, and Facebook should pay the Metropolitan Police to find extremist content on their sites, because they're not doing a good enough job by themselves.
MPs investigating the tech giants described them as "a disgrace" because they don't delete illegal material quickly enough.
The MPs are part of the Home Affairs Committee, which released a report today about hate speech online and its impact on the real world.
In the report, they used examples like MPs receiving antisemitic abuse online, Facebook hosting sexualised images of children, and YouTube hosting terrorist recruitment and neo-Nazi videos.
Social media companies, they said, should help fund the Metropolitan Police's online counter-terrorism unit to find extremist content online on their behalf. That unit is currently funded by UK taxpayers, and flags hateful content to Facebook, Twitter, and Google.
This is what the MPs proposed in their report:
"Football teams are obliged to pay for policing in their stadiums and immediate surrounding areas on match days. Government should now consult on adopting similar principles online— for example, requiring social media companies to contribute to the Metropolitan Police's CTIRU [counter-terrorism internet referral unit] for the costs of enforcement activities which should rightfully be carried out by the companies themselves."
The MPs also proposed "meaningful fines" if the tech giants didn't take down illegal content in a short time, and quarterly reports which showed how much hate speech they had removed from their platforms.
Committee chair Yvette Cooper added:
"The biggest and richest social media companies are shamefully far from taking sufficient action to tackle illegal and dangerous content, to implement proper community standards or to keep their users safe. Given their immense size, resources and global reach, it is completely irresponsible of them to fail to abide by the law, and to keep their users and others safe."
At the moment, it doesn't look like the government will change the law to force tech giants to take hate speech more seriously. According to the report, MPs have pressured the trio to do more in a series of meetings. Last month, the three firms promised to develop new tools to identify terrorist propaganda online after meeting with home secretary Amber Rudd.
Facebook, Twitter, and Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Join the conversation about this story »
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Apple’s Stock Races Ahead as Investors Bet on New iPhones
April 30, 2017 at 11:30PM
Apple’s shares are up nearly 60 percent since last summer. Investors hope new iPhones due in September will prompt many Apple users to upgrade.
A radical finance firm has an app that'll show you the impact of all of your purchases
April 30, 2017 at 11:32PM
Aspiration, a financial services firm founded on the radical idea that clients should pay what they think is fair, wants to help its customer keep track of the impact of their purchases.
The firm announced April 26 it is equipping its checking-account users with a new tool, Aspiration Impact Measurement, that shows them how sustainable their purchases are. The firm has about 100,000 checking-account customers.
Let's say, for instance, an Aspiration checking-account user buys a coffee from Starbucks. When that person checks their account balance they'll see that they spent $X for their grande frappe whatever. But they will also see a score that gauges Starbuck's sustainability on a scale of 1 to 100.
In this case, Starbucks has an AIM score of 78, which is the highest of any eatery. The point of the tool is to inform users about a firm's sustainability so that they can make informed choices about spending. Users can also view their personal AIM score, which essentially aggregates all of the purchases a person makes into one score. It is updated on a daily basis.
"Today, more than ever before, Americans are looking to put their values into action and their AIM score empowers them to demand that corporations act responsibly toward the environment and their employees,” said Aspiration cofounder and CEO Andrei Cherny. “Americans spend $36 billion a day as consumers, making decisions based on cost, convenience and quality. Now, for the first time, they’ll have an easy way to make spending decisions based on conscience, as well.”
A firm's Aspiration Impact Measurement (AIM) score is based on two different measurements: a people score and a planet score. The former score takes into consideration data such as the ratio of employee to CEO pay, employee benefits, equality of benefits, and the percentage of woman who are managers in the company. The planet score measures things such as a firm's green house gas emissions and carbon footprint.
AIM scores are calculated using Aspiration's proprietary algorithm that examines more than 75,000 data points.
According to Cherny, the numbers behind the AIM scores are typically used by money mangers to inform their investment decisions.
"These are the kind of data providers that are working for investment firms, and hedge funds," Cherny told Business Insider."We repurpose this investor data for consumer purposes. It goes into an algorithm which then figures out those scores."
The service is only available for Aspiration customers, who can access their AIM scores for free within their Aspiration mobile app.
The founder of LinkedIn says too many of us are using the site all wrong
April 30, 2017 at 09:33PM
If you use LinkedIn, you've undoubtedly received invitations to connect to people that you've never met or may never meet in your entire life.
The more you stay on the site and the more you gain prominence in your field, the more requests from strangers you'll get.
And while it could seem natural to decline a Facebook friend request from a stranger because you don't want to give them access to your personal information and photos, the dynamic on LinkedIn is much different.
You may think that because it's a social network for professionals, you should simply accept all invitations and see which of them stick.
It's the approach that "Never Eat Alone" author and management consultant to Fortune 100 companies Keith Ferrazzi took for years. Not long ago, Ferrazzi wrote in the 2014 updated edition of his bestselling career guide, he had the privilege of meeting LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman and discussing the site with him.
"'You're doing it all wrong, Keith!' That is, in essence, what Reid Hoffman told me when I told him how I was using LinkedIn," Ferrazzi writes.
Here's the gist of what Hoffman told him, as written in "Never Eat Alone," bolding our own:
"LinkedIn is a closed network, and for a very simple reason: For the network to have value as an introduction tool, the connections need to have meaning. It's up to you to vet each and every request so that if someone comes to you and says, 'Would you introduce me?,' you're in a position to evaluate whether the connection would be of mutual benefit."
You don't need to do a deep analysis of every person who asks to connect with you. But if you'd feel awkward chatting with them or introducing them to someone in your network, then decline, without a guilty conscience.
And if you really want to use LinkedIn as it was intended, make "at least one quality introduction a month," per Hoffman's suggestion in his 2012 book "The Start-up of You.
SEE ALSO: How to write a cold email that gets a response from even the busiest people
Join the conversation about this story »
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It's the GMC Canyon Denali and the Honda Ridgeline in a battle of the small pickups (GM)
April 30, 2017 at 09:27PM
Small pickups were once an essential part of the truck mix. A lot of young folks enjoyed them as an inexpensive starter vehicle.
But gradually, automakers phased them out in favor of crossover SUVs while concentrating on the full-size pickups that are their most profitable products.
In the past few years, however, smaller pickups — bigger than the modest Ford Rangers and Chevy S-10s of the past — have staged a comeback.
For US carmakers, Chevy's Colorado almost single-handedly revived the segment, which had been filled by trucks like the Toyota Tacoma and the Nissan Frontier. Soon, Ford will bring back the Ranger.
Of course, Honda has long had a small pickup in its lineup: the oddball Ridgeline. This wasn't a truck for truck people. It was more of an SUV with a pickup truck bed.
The styling was offbeat. But for the latest generation, perhaps sensing that small pickups are the comeback trail, Honda made the Ridgeline into more of a proper truck. We checked it out last year and were impressed.
So we thought it would be good to compare the new Ridgeline to more of a true pickup.
And then the GMC Canyon Denali landed in our driveway.
The Canyon Denali is the GMC version of the Chevy Colorado, given some further snazziness with the upscale Denali treatment.
On paper, it stacks up well against the Ridgeline, costing about the same and running a similar V6 engine. But there are some crucial differences:
SEE ALSO: It's the BMW X1 against the Buick Encore in a battle of the small SUVs
The 2017 Canyon Denali arrived early in the year, during a respite from snow and ice, but before the weather warmed. Truck conditions! Price? $44,255, as tested. The base GMC Canyon, without the upmarket Denali trim features, is about $22,000.
The Canyon Denali is outfitted with a 3.6-liter V6 that makes just north of 300 horsepower and pipes the power to, in the case of our tester, an all-wheel-drive system through an eight speed automatic transmission.
The motor feels robust and quite trucky, which is to say a tad crude (the same engine is found in the Cadillac XT5 and comes off as much more refined). This is powerplant that can roar. The Canyon Denali also has a towing mode that can handle 7,000 pounds, about 2,000 more than what the Ridgeline is rated for.
Our 2017 Ridgeline tester tipped the cost scales at $41,370, and it landed at BI's suburban New Jersey test center after a light winter snowstorm in late 2016. The base pickup is about $30,000.
Read the review here.
The Ridgeline delivers a peppier, smoother ride than the Canyon Denali — much more car-like, which makes sense give its fully independent suspension. You just don't feel like you're in a truck, which for a lot of buyers will be a good thing. A problem with pickups in daily use is that they can beat you up a bit.
The Rideline's powerplant is a 3.5-liter, 280-horsepower V6. This is one of the world's great motors, perhaps the best V6 anywhere. Mated to a six-speed automatic transmission, this engine is more or less perfect and provides 21 mpg in combined city/highway driving. That's slightly better than the GMC's 21 mpg combined.
Our Canyon Denali was a crew-cab version with a "short box" — the bed is about five feet long, protected by a bedliner. If you're shopping for a Chevy truck, this vehicle can be had as the Colorado.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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- Article: Recommended Reading: May 1, 2017
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