Week 48

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You Are Your Phone

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Nick Carr explains why through ever more sophisticated algorithmic analysis of phone metadata being conducted by corporations and state actors our phones provides a rich digital trail that can identify individual economic status and even whether or not you are a loan risk.  Jaron Lanier may have railed against the Internet “deadening us as people” in You Are Not a Gadget, but increasingly it appears, you are your phone :

We see here how deeply entwined the phone has become with the self — a seamless extension of body, mind, and personality. It is so much a part of us that we are no more conscious of the device moment-to-moment than we are of, say, our hands. … imagine what would be revealed by a deeper analysis, one that examined the apps we use, the people we connect with, the things we look at and listen to, what we say and what we write and what we like, where we go, what we search for, the photos we take. It’s all there, public self and private self. There’s no shame in admitting the fact: You are your phone.

  • The digital trace presented by Carr sure looks amenable to machine learning data mining approaches:

Barcode of smartphone use over two weeks.Black areas indicate times where the phone was in use and Saturdays are indicated with a red dashed line. Weekday alarm clock times (and snoozing) are clearly evident.

Mobile, Manufacturers and Devices

  • Xiaomi are also finding India something of a struggle to crack. Apple meanwhile are eyeing it up as a key driver for future iPhone growth given the “big shift for Indian consumers now is toward devices with 4G connectivity built in“.  Currently they enjoy a surprisingly low sub-1% market share.  Their challenge will be making progress in a market heavily tilted towards affordable handsets:

How Tim Cook and his team reconcile the vast potential of India’s rapidly growing population of tech consumers with Apple’s tradition for selling premium devices at premium prices will be one of the more interesting business storylines going forward.

idc india

  • A premium company that has really struggled with the relentless pace of its more affordable rivals is Bang & Olufsen.  It’s been loss-making three years straight and now looking for a buyer:

“in the long term the company will benefit from a partnership or a buyer with more scale in an interchangeable technological industry.”

Nokia is betting the technological wave of virtual reality will be big enough that companies will shell out $60,000 for a camera that can capture immersive views of the world.

ozo-press-photo-shade

  • Firefox don’t need Google’s money anymore thanks to “regional deals with other search engine companies, notably Yahoo in the United States, Baidu in China and Yandex in Russia.

smart-battery-chip

  • The Guardian provided a profile ARM, “Britain’s most successful tech company you’ve never heard of“.  Unless you work in tech of course in which case you’ll be all too familiar with them and with their classic tech playbook business model:

the key to its success, it seems, is that it has cracked the goal of every business in the world: it gets paid multiple times for the same work. The chip layouts that are its bread and butter are general-purpose enough that they can be reused again and again in different situations.

Apps and Services

Netflix is poised to be THE global leader in streaming entertainment. That didn’t happen by accident. It’s a combination of innovation, strategic thinking and, to be fair, a little luck. Copying that exactly would be impossible.

 Since the rise of app analytics onboarding steps are heavily bmeasured and many app developers see that more than 50% new users immediately abandon a freshly downloaded app if they are confronted with a signup screen.

  • And yet, the author points out that with iCloud it is possible to use a 33-character iCloud token in your app to avoid asking the user for email or any other credential.  This token can be used for subsequent app-specific push notifications to the corresponding iPhone:

That iCloud ID token …

is globally unique, every user has it’s own token similar to an email

it is the same on every device of a user

it does not unveil any user details like his email address

is different for every app

  • TechCrunch review the many ways in which hungry 3rd party entrepreneurs are ‘eating the world’ using the WeChat messaging platform.  WeBank is attempting to disrupt the banking world with a proposition that promises “to introduce a camera-based facial recognition system for the approval of bank loans, and offer the option of linking your WeChat account to a standard bank card”:

2

Google and Android

  • Andy Rubin is reportedly going to be starting his own Android phone company.   Even Mr Rubin will need to be doing totally different out of the box to make any real dent on a saturated market and well-worn conveyer belt through the ODM supply chain that brands are piling up to get onto:

This supposed Rubin Android startup will need to have an angle, and thus far it’s not clear what that would be. Perhaps it will have something to do with Google’s proposed hardware component designs.

Cars

The ultimate aim is to get access to all the car’s functions which are exposed by the API

BMW API Details-fs8

Cloud and Digital Transformation

“most executives don’t recognize that consumer IT and enterprise IT are different animals. They don’t understand that they must play the pivotal role in the critical decisions that shape enterprise IT … In the corporate world, users usually get what they are given because their leaders have not bothered to define what they want. Executives who don’t take the time to develop a digital strategy get the IT they deserve.”

  • Revealing BusinessInsider piece quoting ex-Barclays CEO on how Fintech is coming and going to disrupt the old Banking industry forever with its own Uber moment.

a new wave of tech-savvy startups that can do things better, faster, and cheaper than the big banks will disrupt their traditional businesses like lending, payments, and wealth management.

  • Paul Johnston on how two other great Amazon technologies, AWS Cognito and Lambda, can be combined with AWS API Gateway to create truly “serverless” apps.  Cognito deals with authentication and Lambda with backend request processing paid for in 100ms slices.

SalesforceIQ-infrastructure-docker

  • Last week’s blog highlighted a Brain Pickings post about Luke Howard, the Namer of Clouds.  And now courtesy of a reader, a photo of his blue plaque spotted in Tottenham where he “lived and died”.  It seems an incongruous place to be staring at the sky.

NamerOfClouds

Hardware and the Internet of Things

The biggest problem of the Raspberry Pi is something that has existed for years now: corrupted SD cards. This problem pops up time and time again on forums, and after Christmas will undoubtedly pop up even more.

  • How to listen to satellites with a $30 setup constructed from commodity hardware and the open source GQRX software-defined radio stack (SDR).

How_VLC_works

Smart Retail

A survey conducted by Forrester earlier this year found that only 3 percent of retailers use beacons; just 16 percent had plans to try the technology in the foreseeable future.

Artificial Intelligence

How can the man or processor be intelligent if does not understand what it’s doing? … Intelligence should be defined by the ability to understand.

fire provides a way to cook, but we have managed somehow to keep from burning everything down. The same rules apply here. We have taken the necessary precautions to safeguard ourselves from these horrors.

  • Hope they get 100% uptime sorted out by then too:

Hybrid-Brains-by-2030

  • Meanwhile back on earth:

Software Engineering

Swift is clearly where most of the future investment is going, and Apple would prefer that developers starting new projects start them in Swift if possible.

  • Rob Pike, the author of Go on why Simplicity is actually Complicated:

Startups and Innovation

  • FirstRound’s state of startups 2015 survey provides a wealth of insight into the US startup scene from over 500 founders.  One of the most interesting revelations was that hiring good people was the top of the list of founder concerns with building the right culture at number four:

StateOfStartups

  • The full deck is linked here:

  • Quora remains an absolute treasure trove of interesting information.  Here’s yet another great example with a fascinating response to the question of what the founder of a 100m worth startup would be expected to make on exit.  The answer of course is that it depends but the range presented here is eye-opening and reveals the inherent unpredictability of outcome in startup land.
  • Steve Jobs, Apple and innovation:

Science

Culture and Society

In order to diminish hate speech and increase digital diversity, we have to teach kids how to code.

  • Motherboard on the curious world of quantified stoners who combine data nerdiness with a quest for high quality unadulterated weed leading to ‘stoner-centric’ apps like Leafly aimed at ‘trimmigrants’:

Quantified stoners wear FitBit and Jawbone wristbands to track their daily activity, log their runs and bike rides on apps like Strava and RunKeeper, graph their moods, keep spreadsheets documenting their sex lives, and now optimize their buzzes with high grade weed and a range of data-enriched gadgets to go with it.

  • They do like their gear:

fitbit

  • If you haven’t seen this trending tweet, it’s worth reflecting on the speech of Benn the father nearly 20 years ago with that of his son this week.  And yes, that’s Jeremy Corbyn in the background.

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