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19 Jun 21:17

RANKED: All 23 of Netflix's original shows from best to worst (NFLX)

by Nathan McAlone

orange is the new black ruby rose netflix 2

Netflix has poured millions into producing its own original shows, but the company is notoriously secretive about telling us how many people are actually watching them.

We know which shows are being talked about, like "House of Cards" or "Orange Is the New Black" (new season June 17), but that doesn't necessarily represent the quality of the show itself.

To get a sense of how Netflix's shows stack up against one another, we turned to the reviews aggregator Metacritic, which pulls in critic (and audience) reviews from all over the world. We looked only at dramas and comedies Netflix had originated, and they had to have been reviewed by at least a few top critics. That left 23.

There were a few surprises in the data, one of which was that after a stellar end to 2015, Netflix has been in a bit of slump.

Here are Netflix's 23 original shows, ordered from worst to best critical reception:

SEE ALSO: Hackers are selling lifetime access to stolen Netflix accounts for less than $1

No. 23: "Fuller House" — 35/100

Average critic score: 35/100

Audience score: 6.3

Netflix description: The Tanner family's adventures continue as DJ Tanner-Fuller shares a home with her sister Stephanie and friend Kimmy who help raise her three boys.



No. 22: "Marseille" — 35/100

Average critic score: 35/100

Audience score: 6.4

Netflix description: As Marseille's mayor rallies support for a controversial casino project, his longtime protege prepares to take a bold step.



No. 21: "Hemlock Grove" — 41/100

Average critic score: 41/100

Audience score: 6.7/10

Netflix description: A quaint town links a mangled corpse to a dark outsider with a carnivorous secret. But monsters come in many forms. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
19 Jun 21:15

Squirrels have probably caused way more power outages than cyber-criminals

by Meghan Bartels

scheming squirrel

If your power has ever gone out on a beautiful day, you may have been the victim of a squirrelly attack.

That's because squirrels are responsible for an impressive number of electrical issues each year.

Although it's tricky to get a real sense of how many outages squirrels manage to cause, the numbers are daunting. One estimate tallies 560 in Montana alone last year. Another blames a whopping 400 outages in Austin, Texas, last year on the sneaky rodents.

Squirrels and their partners in crime cause about 10-20% of all power outages, according to The Washington Post.

Squirrel-induced power outages tend to be more localized and more quickly fixed than those caused by storms, since one little rodent can only chew so much. But they're still a real issue. Each one can affect as many as 13,000 people at a time, and in 2015, squirrel blackouts cost Montana alone $11 million.

Stack that up against one of the most talked-about grid security issues: cyberattacks. While there have been a handful of blackouts allegedly caused by cyberattacks, like December's in the Ukraine, some cybersecurity experts argue that only the Stuxnet attack on Iran produced confirmed physical damage.

squirrel walking on power lineThat's not to say, of course, that we should ignore the risk of cyberattacks. Their potential impact is enormous. But we shouldn't pretend they're the only threat our grid faces, says the anonymous information security specialist who runs Cyber Squirrel, a light-hearted website tracking "unclassified Cyber Squirrel Operations."

There is one small silver lining to this nutty problem. Because of everyday issues like squirrel attacks, there are actually a lot of redundancies built into the US electrical grid that make it more resilient. That means outages don't ripple across huge portions of the country, as happened in Kenya last week when a monkey fell on a transformer.

Electricity companies have a collection of techniques to try to protect their wires from rascally squirrels, like plastic coverings on poles where wires intersect and rotating caps that squirrels can't grip onto long enough to let them do any damage. But they're up against a powerful foe, since squirrels never stop teething.

Other animals, including birds, raccoons, and snakes, also cause power outages on occasion, but squirrels are far and away the most common culprit.

SEE ALSO: How to hack a bank

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Hackers showed us how to break into the grid — and it was shockingly easy

19 Jun 21:14

Google’s killer feature for Chromebooks has started to roll out (GOOG)

by Jeff Dunn

google play offline movies on chromebookAt its I/O developers conference last month, Google announced that the Google Play app store would soon be available on its set of Chromebook laptops.

Today, that plan is starting to come to fruition.

As noted by Google’s François Beaufort, anyone with an Asus Chromebook Flip can now access the Play Store, and the millions of Android apps within it, by switching to Chrome OS’s developer channel.

Beaufort says other devices will follow with the update “very soon.” Last month Google noted that Acer’s Chromebook R11 (C738T) and its own Chromebook Pixel (2015) would also be in the first wave of Google Play-enabled Chromebooks, so expect those to gain the functionality before long. Several other Chromebooks are scheduled to get access later in the year.

As you can guess, the developer channel is meant for developers, so ordinary users will have to dig into the “About Chrome OS” part of the Settings menu (and reboot their computers) to access the store.

The update suggests that a full consumer release isn’t far behind. Google was not immediately available to comment on a potential timeframe.

The move to support Android apps marks a major milestone for Chromebooks. Chrome OS has often been derided for being little more than an extended web browser; being able to natively run a wide array of games and apps, many of which work offline, would seem to put Chromebooks much closer to their Windows or Mac rivals in terms of overall functionality.

This is particularly appealing since many Chromebooks can be had for as low as $250 (and since most cheap Windows laptops are slower by comparison). If everything works smoothly, it could make buying a new laptop much less of a burden on many people’s wallets.

SEE ALSO: Here's why Chromebooks are going to be so awesome

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NOW WATCH: Sorry Apple fans — the iPhone 7 is going to be boring

16 Jun 22:34

McDonald's M&M McFlurry might soon go extinct — here's why

by Rafi Letzter

m&m mcflurry

Show some restraint, America.

That's the message the Mars candy company (of all possible groups) may soon spread.

NBC News reports that the company is planning — or at least "weighing" — a change to how its candies show up in fast food desserts.

Right now you can walk into a McDonald's and buy a McFlurry milkshake with M&Ms swirled in. Or a Burger King and buy a Snickers-branded pie. Or a Dairy Queen and ask for an M&M "Blizzard."

All of those brands are made by Mars. But Mars is considering pulling these small pieces of sugary candies out of those larger piles of sugary food, as writer Rheanna O'Neil Bellomo laments in Seventeen.

In an email to Tech Insider, a Mars rep tells us whatever decision they do make, it will be part of the company's goal to bring their consumers' sugar intake to less than 10% of total daily calories — in line with World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations, among other groups. McDonald's did not immediately respond to our questions about the potential product changes.

Here's the logic behind a candy company claiming it can help cut sugar intake.

A McFlurry contains plenty of sugar on its own. Stir in a serving of M&Ms, with their 7.5 teaspoons of sugar, and the total sugar in that one treat exceeds the maximum 12.5 teaspoons of sugar that WHO recommended for your whole day.

And as we've reported before on Tech Insider, too much sugar can have devastating effects on your body, including (but not limited to):

  • cavities (as any dentist will tell you)
  • weight gain and obesity
  • diabetes
  • liver failure
  • kidney failure
  • increased risk of multiple types of cancer

All of this makes it hard to know how to think about this possible Mars move. Whether or not the company decides to lessen the intestinal sucker punch of fast-food ice cream, it's probably a good idea to cut back sugary junk food on your own.

SEE ALSO: The best fast food in America

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NOW WATCH: This one ingredient is making a lot of Americans fat

16 Jun 22:06

It looks like Salesforce was also interested in buying LinkedIn

by Julie Bort

satya nadella microsoft

The rich $26.2 billion price that Microsoft paid to acquire LinkedIn this week prompted speculation that Microsoft may have been in a bidding war to buy the company.

On Thursday, Bloomberg said in a report that Salesforce was a "rival potential bidder" for LinkedIn. 

Salesforce was advised in negotiations for LinkedIn by investment bank Goldman Sachs, Bloomberg said, citing anonymous sources.

It's not clear from the report how far those negotiations actually went, but we know that Microsoft ultimately came away with the prize.

Microsoft had apparently been sort of watching LinkedIn for a few years, these people told Bloomberg, but Microsoft didn't approach LinkedIn. Instead LinkedIn Executive Chairman Reid Hoffman and Chief Executive Officer Jeff Weiner contacted Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella to alert him that they were talking with another company about another deal.

When Microsoft's announced that it was buying LinkedIn on Monday, the tech industry was shocked and baffled.

But Nadella explained that one of the big reasons it wanted LinkedIn was to help it revamp its Dyanmics product line, its product that competes with Salesforce.

Nadella explained it in a sentence to Business Insider's Matt Rosoff. He said that buy buying LinkedIn's professional network:

"It helps us differentiate our CRM product with social selling. It helps us take Dynamics into new spaces like human capital management with recruiting, and learning, and talent management."

Nadella had reportedly attempted to buy Salesforce itself outright last year but the deal fell through when the two couldn't agree on a price. So he was ready to go big on this beefing up this area.

When that deal fell through, insiders say that Microsoft has since ramped up its competition against Salesforce.

Microsoft plans to miine LinkedIn's professional network for everything from HR software to sales software and Microsoft plans to integrate LinkedIn with Office 365, and marry LinkedIn's ad business with its own.

SEE ALSO: Microsoft buys LinkedIn for $26.2 billion

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NOW WATCH: All 460 Sports Authority stores are closing — here’s when clearance sales begin

16 Jun 19:23

Microsoft just joined a herd of tech companies trying to cash-in on the legal marijuana boom (MSFT)

by Julie Bort

Satya Nadella talking

Now that marijuana is legal for medical or recreational use in 20 states, there's a whole crop of IT companies sprouting up to support this fledgling, but clearly lucrative, industry.

As of Thursday, you can count Microsoft among them, according to a press release issued by its pot-software partner, a company called Kind Financial.

This is the first time Microsoft has done a pot-industry-related partnership, a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed.

Kind makes software that allows cannabis-business owners to run their businesses while also verifying that they are complying with all the regulations that govern the trade.

This partnership with Microsoft is to offer governments similar tools for tracking all the pot companies (from "seed to sale tracking" as Kind puts it), to monitor that these businesses are in compliance with the rules.

Remember that in the states where pot is legal, states are often collecting hefty taxes on sales as well as strictly regulating who is allowed to grow or sell what, so governments increasingly need software to help.

Kind will be running this new software for governments in Microsoft's cloud, Azure. A spokesperson tells us:

The Microsoft Cloud for Government supports government missions to regulate and monitor controlled substances and items, from the Department of Justice regulating tobacco and firearms to a state regulating legal cannabis. KIND Financial is building solutions on Microsoft’s cloud platform to help government agencies act in their governmental capacity.

In the press release, Microsoft's director of government solutions Kimberly Nelson also said: "KIND agreed that Azure Government is the only cloud platform designed to meet government standards for the closely regulated cannabis compliance programs."

That's high praise indeed.

Microsoft could not be immediately reached for additional comment.

SEE ALSO: Apple is trying to fight Google's artificial intelligence with one hand tied behind its back

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NOW WATCH: 7 surprising medical benefits of marijuana

15 Jun 20:33

The inside story of why Cisco's four most powerful engineers really quit — and why many employees are relieved (CSCO)

by Julie Bort

Cisco MarioPremLuca

It's 8 a.m. and 200 people have gathered in a Cisco conference room. It's the team of engineers working on Cisco's flagship network product.

Two of Cisco's legendary engineers, Luca Cafiero and Soni Jiandani, sit at the table. He's at the head of the table, she's at his side. A diet cola rests at his elbow.

Cafiero is holding court.

He will call on and grill various people in the room about the progress of their projects, sometimes asking involved technical details. He'll call on someone junior, then someone senior as his interest takes him. The meeting could last all day.

Like these day-long meetings, Cafiero was known as demanding and meticulous. Not everybody at Cisco liked him, but he was respected, even feared. Jiandani, who handled product marketing, was known as an extremely capable manager, good at execution, but a political player and demanding to the point of being harsh.

Earlier this month, in a move that industry insiders saw as a deliberate slap in the face to their CEO Chuck Robbins, Cafiero and Jiandani quit the company loudly and publicly.

Soni JiandaniThey were joined by two of Cisco's other legendary engineers, Mario Mazzola and Prem Jain, who quit at the same time. Mazzola was considered a tough negotiator who took care of his own people and didn't shy from corporate politics, while Jain was considered a great engineer and a nice man.

The four of them were a team known as MPLS, (a joke on their first names; MPLS is also a tech Cisco invented). They had been with the company for 20 years.

They were some of the most powerful people within Cisco — so powerful that they were still reporting to former CEO John Chambers after he resigned and became executive chairman. Their departure is a major event for Cisco and the tech industry segment, networking, that Cisco has ruled for more than 20 years.

Here's how it happened. 

'A vote of no confidence'

Chuck Robbins, chief executive officer of Cisco Systems in Laguna Beach, California October 20, 2015.      REUTERS/Mike Blake

"It was a vote of no confidence in Robbins," one industry insider who knew all the players but never worked for Cisco told us. "You don't quit like that."

The usual face-saving method of leaving had already been announced a few days earlier: Cisco said that the team was moving into advisory roles (something they've done a few times in their past), and the idea was that they would quietly fade away.

But it didn't work out that way.

Robbins knew what he was doing, and deliberately ended their internal power. That made them want to quit publicly like this, one person told us.

Their parting was not publicly acrimonious. It couldn't be. Their current team, known as Insieme, includes over 1,000 people who are building Cisco's flagship product and are loyal to these rock star engineers.

Robbins sent an email to the Cisco troops praising MPLS when announcing their departure. It said:

I want to recognize Mario, Prem, Luca, and Soni for the countless contributions they have made to Cisco. I have personally learned so much from them, and they will always be an important part of Cisco’s engineering story. Their legacy will live on through our ongoing innovation and the talented engineering leaders they have mentored. I wish them the best.

'The heart, soul, brains, and mouth' of Cisco 

The MPLS team were known as "heart, soul, brains and mouth" of Cisco, one person previously told us.

Cisco Mario MazzollaThey were responsible for nearly every one of the company's most successful products over the past 20 years through an unusual system called "spin-ins," where Cisco paid for their startup and then bought it back for a sizeable sum when the product was completed.

Several people told us the team had big egos to match their success. Others described them more graciously as "proud."

Former CEO John Chambers funneled over $2 billion to them over the years, mainly through these spin ins.

Their success was so important to Chambers that he was their fierce champion.

When doing a spin-in "they could just call John [Chambers] up and say, 'John, we need more money.' And they would get it,'" one former employee told us. That didn't happen for managers of other products in other departments.

One person familiar with the spin-ins told us that each of these top engineers pocketed up to $40 million for each spin-in Cisco bought.

Cisco Luca CafieroThey would equally share their equity with the first six to eight people who joined their spin-ins, making it easy for them to pull some of the brightest engineers from Cisco into their latest ventures. Employees who joined later would also get a stake, but a smaller one, like as in most startups.

These spin-ins caused resentment among some rank and file Cisco employees who didn't get the chance to earn millions in bonuses if they built a successful product.

People also told us that MPLS sometimes used their influence with Chambers to criticize and derail other projects at Cisco if they they felt these projects competed with their own interests.

For that reason, many Cisco employees outside of Insieme were glad to see them go, we were told.

Big sales at a price

The current product the MPLS team worked on was Cisco's most important network switch, the Nexus 9000, and software called ACI, which allows Cisco to compete in a hot up-and-coming market called software defined networking.

Cisco paid $863 million to buy Insieme and Wall Street was watching how well it sold. And it has been selling well.

Cisco Prem JainBut insiders say its sales were at the expense of Cisco's other products in the Nexus line — products that the MPLS Insieme team were not responsible for. 

Cisco has cut the cost of the Nexus 9000 so much that customers could get the bigger, faster switch for a bargain compared to the lower-end models.

In March, Cisco doubled down on this, announcing that its latest Nexus 9000 would deliver 100G of speed "for 40 gig pricing," Robbins said.

Consequently, with Nexus selling well at discounted prices, overall revenue for the switching unit was down 3%, Cisco reported in May. It was down 4% the previous quarter, too (although it had grown 5% the previous quarter).

The ACI software is also selling well —revenue grew 100% and its on a $2 billion annualized run-rate, Robbins told analysts in May — but we've heard from multiple people that once customers bought it, they found it too difficult to install and use.

"ACI is too expensive, too complex, and doesn't solve a real problem. Chuck [Robbins] probably figured this out and put some else in charge to salvage it and didn't want to deal with the egos any longer," one former employee told us. 

Another person told us that some ACI customers had joked that this software was really "hardware-defined-networking" — in other words, not the revolutionary networking software that promises to unseat Cisco in the network industry.

Why they really quit

Meanwhile, Robbins has now been CEO for about a year and has been systematically putting his own team in place.

When MPLS first agreed to step away and become "advisors," on May 25, Robbins and Chambers stood side-by-side with all four of these engineers in an all-hands meeting to announce the change.

The fact that Chambers was standing alongside Robbins at that meeting was hugely significant.

At the time, Jiandani had said she'd stay on and become Insieme's leader, reporting to directly to Robbins. Cisco announced this news to the company.

That would have been a big promotion for her.

John Chambers Cisco CEOBut it also meant that she would no longer report to Chambers. 

One insider told us she wanted to continue to run Insieme as a separate unit, but Robbins made it clear that as a part of his leadership team, she would held accountable for overall growth of the data center switching Nexus line, not just the Nexus 9000.

Instead of taking the job, she joined the others and publicly quit.

While Robbins has said he will not do the spin-in thing, there was a rumor that the team was in talks with their favorite patron, John Chambers, about funding them for a new venture.

A close source to MPLS says this isn't true, the team has no plans for a new project together, and Chambers is not becoming an angel investor for them.

In the meantime, Robbins now has the full helm of Cisco and we're hearing that many people inside the company are relieved.

SEE ALSO: Why Cisco Has Showered These 3 Men With Billions Of Dollars

SEE ALSO: Two former Cisco execs are reinventing your Wi-Fi experience thanks to a 16-year-old girl

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Adam Savage reveals why he and 'MythBusters' cohost Jamie Hyneman won't be working together anymore

15 Jun 20:25

Meerkat has secretly been testing a new video chat app

by Steve Kovach

houseparty app

Meerkat, the company that made the buzzy app of the same name from over a year ago that effectively kicked off the live streaming app craze, is trying something new.

According to a source, the company is testing a new group video chat app called Houseparty, which is already available in the App Store. The developer for the app is listed as Alexander Herzick, a VP at Telegraph Hill Partners, a private equity firm.

Recode first reported the news.

It's unclear if Telegraph Hill has invested in Meerkat. Herzick did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Ben Rubin, Meerkat's CEO, declined to comment when reached by phone. He has said in the past the company would try something other than live streaming.

Houseparty looks pretty standard — invite your friends and have a group video chat in a cutesy interface. I couldn't test the app for myself since none of my friends are using it. Here's a quick promotional video from the app's YouTube page:

Meerkat has raised $17.5 million so far, according to Crunchbase. Its investors include Greylock Partners, Comcast Ventures, and Jared Leto.

Meerkat had the tech world salivating over the prospect of live streaming during spring of 2015. The app was pretty much all anyone could talk about at last year's SXSW festival. But Meerkat quickly got the wind knocked out of it after Twitter launched its live-streaming app Periscope. More recently, Facebook seems to be dominating live streaming now that the News Feed algorithm heavily promotes live video. Facebook also pays media organizations to publish a certain amount of live video per week.

SEE ALSO: Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff deleted his Facebook account because it was getting 'overwhelming'

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Adam Savage reveals why he and 'MythBusters' cohost Jamie Hyneman won't be working together anymore

15 Jun 17:37

Why Netflix CEO Reed Hastings doesn't have an office

by Nathan McAlone

Reed hastings Netflix CEO

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings is worth $1.29 billion but he doesn't even have his own office.

The reason isn't some nod toward egalitarianism, or a need to feel in the midst of his employees, but rather that he simply doesn't need one, he told The New York Times.

“My office is my phone,” Hastings said.

“I found I was rarely using my cubicle, and I just had no need for it. It is better for me to be meeting people all around the building.”

For the Times' interview, he met the reporter in Netflix's cafeteria, where he leaned back, "tossing off answers to questions as if it were a day at the beach."

Part of why Hastings has no need for an office is because he's often on the go. He told Fortune he spends 3 to 4 nights in LA a month, and has been doing a lot of international travel.

But it says something about the way Hastings thinks that he's chosen to ditch his office. Obviously he could have one, even if just for things like meeting a Times reporter. But that wouldn't be the most efficient use of Netflix's resources.

SEE ALSO: Why Netflix thinks its personalized recommendation engine is worth $1 billion per year

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NOW WATCH: How to find Netflix’s secret categories

14 Jun 18:43

Sweden wants to kill cash within 5 years, and it's getting really close

by Chris Weller

ikea workers

Empty wallets aren't a sign of hard times in Sweden — they're a mark of progress.

With cash making up just 2% of the value of all the country's payments, the small Scandinavian country has asserted itself as the world's pioneer in the move to eliminate coins and paper money.

Museums, street vendors, and even churches — though steeped in tradition — have all started relying solely on plastic and electronic payments.

In March, the country's largest radio broadcaster, Swedish Radio, released a report saying all cash could disappear by 2021.

Sweden is no stranger to rethinking basic tenets of society.  The country opened its first unmanned convenience store in February, in which customers use their smartphones to both enter the store and purchase food, and has declared it will become the first country in the world to go oil-free. 

The constant upgrading and retooling is part of the country's overall mission of becoming more efficient. In global rankings of innovative countries, Sweden consistently ranks in the top five.

In other words, going cashless is more of a small step for Swedes than it is a giant leap.

The trend has its downsides. In addition to burdening people who don't keep up with new technology (like the elderly and some rural citizens) , a cashless society is also more vulnerable to electronic fraud. In 2014, the number of fraud cases rose to 140,000 — more than double the amount from a decade ago, Sweden's Ministry of Justice reports. Critics of a cashless system fear even greater surges as payments move online.

Those who support the system point to decreased theft in the physical world — in the form of burglaries and pickpocketing — if criminals know a card can get deactivated instantly.

Today, Sweden is miles ahead of many European countries in its use of plastic payment.

In 2015, the average Swede made 207 payments by card. That's three times as many made by people in neighboring countries. Swedish Radio expects the gap to widen even more within the next five years, with that 2% figure dropping to 0.5% or lower.

"Sometimes you have to learn new things," Krister Colde, of Sweden's Commercial Employees' Union, told The Local. "It's a little awkward for a transitional period, but I think it's going to be so simple that you pretty soon realize that this is a lot easier and better than having cash."

SEE ALSO: Here's a look at the history of credit cards

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NOW WATCH: Here’s why flights take longer than they did 50 years ago

14 Jun 03:25

Symantec grabs Blue Coat Systems for $4.65 billion

by Ron Miller
stacks of hundred dollar bills Symantec announced overnight it had purchased Blue Coat Systems for $4.65 billion with the hopes of creating an enterprise security juggernaut. As part of the deal, Blue Coat CEO Greg Clark will take over the same role at Symantec. The company has been operating since April without one when Michael A. Brown stepped down. It was a stunning turn of events for Blue Coat, which was sold just… Read More
14 Jun 03:11

How Microsoft will put LinkedIn to work in Office

by Sarah Perez
linkedin-professional-profile There are a number of ways that Microsoft plans to take advantage of its $26.2 billion LinkedIn acquisition, ranging from data-gathering to getting a foothold in social to plans for re-imagining the recruitment and talent management businesses and more. But one of the more straightforward integration opportunities between the two companies is LinkedIn’s integration with Microsoft Office.… Read More
14 Jun 02:55

Fiat to provide self-driving cars to Amazon and Uber?

by David Curry
fiat-uber-amazon

Fiat Chrysler is making some more moves in the tech world, meeting with Amazon and Uber earlier this week to talk self-driving. The automaker wants to provide the two companies with test cars, in the hope that it leads to further partnerships down the road.

It comes a month after Fiat partnered with Google’s self-driving efforts, sending 100 Chrysler Pacifica hybrids to Silicon Valley for testing.

See Also: BMW to launch iNext autonomous car in 2021

Fiat would like to be the main supplier of Uber’s self-driving taxi fleet, which CEO Travis Kalanick is interested in establishing. The ridesharing app started testing customized Ford Fusion self-driving cars in Pittsburgh last month, and Fiat may supply Uber with additional cars.

According to Steve Jurvetson, a Tesla board member, Kalanick said that he is willing to purchase every single Tesla car once it has full automation capabilities. That’s a big deal, especially for automotive manufacturers that are struggling, like Fiat.

The Amazon talks are a bit different, Fiat is reportedly focused on deliveries. It wants to provide self-driving cars as a way for Amazon to complete the “last mile” of a delivery even quicker, and perhaps lower the cost of the delivery by removing the driver.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos recently spoke at the Code Conference about the lack of delivery options at peak times, stating that during holiday seasons Amazon needs much more than what’s currently available to manage all of the orders. Having a driverless fleet for purchase or rent could be a good way to get around the lack of availability.

From what we’ve seen, Amazon appears to be more interested in drones than self-driving cars as a means for last mile delivery. We may see multiple delivery services however, with drones used for small packages and self-driving cars for larger and more fragile items.

The Bloomberg report does say that the talks are preliminary, so we shouldn’t expect any announcements in the next few months.

Fiat will be into “hardware?”

Fiat is taking a different position to many automakers, which have started to test self-driving systems internally or purchase startups, in the case of General Motors, to build their portfolio.

While this may result in Fiat becoming nothing more than a hardware manufacturer, it may also stop the company from wasting billions trialling the technology and bringing it to market, instead becoming a supplier for future services that want autonomous vehicles.

That does bring up the question of what an automaker’s purpose is in the future. Will you purchase a car, lease it, or order it from apps like Uber and Lyft? All three are potential options and the lease and order option change the market dynamic for automakers tremendously.

The post Fiat to provide self-driving cars to Amazon and Uber? appeared first on ReadWrite.

11 Jun 20:00

The mobile app boom has ended (AAPL, GOOG, GOOGL)

by Andrew Meola

Global App Download

The mobile app boom in the U.S. has screeched to a halt.

App download growth in the U.S. may have peaked as the pool of new app users shrinks, according to new data from app marketing firm SensorTower and Nomura shared with BI Intelligence, Business Insider's premium research service.

On average, the volume of downloads from the top 15 app publishers across both Apple iOS and Google Android devices fell 20% year-over-year in May 2016.

The global app download volume of the top 15 app publishers continues to climb slightly, but at a slower pace than last year. In May 2016, average global download rates from these publishers grew just 3% YoY.

This growth deceleration is occurring primarily because the largest apps have showed maturation, even as engagement rates remain steady. Facebook now has 1.6 billion monthly active users, which makes it increasingly difficult to find new users to attract. Yet Facebook still managed 36 million downloads in May 2016 despite a 15% YoY decline.

There are some noteworthy exceptions to this trend, however, Uber and Snapchat both registered YoY growth greater than 100%. Snapchat, in particular, has demonstrated tremendous growth thanks in large part to its young user base. And this growth occurs as other social media downloads have declined. So it is difficult, but some app publishers can still enjoy significant app download growth.

For more, see the detailed report on mobile app installs from BI IntelligenceClick here to learn more about how you can gain risk-free access today.

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11 Jun 20:00

Why the NSA and other spies will love the Internet of Things

by Arik Hesseldahl

Hackers already love them, which means spies will, too.

It’s no surprise that the U.S. National Security Agency and presumably other spy agencies around the world are investigating how they might take advantage of the new generation of Internet-connected devices in homes and offices for spying purposes.

What is surprising is how willing Richard Ledgett, the NSA’s deputy director, was to talk about it in remarks at a conference in Washington on Friday. “As my job is to penetrate other people’s networks, complexity is my friend,” he said of the growing mass of common household and office items that are increasingly likely to be logged in to a nearby Wi-Fi network. “The first time you update the software, you introduce vulnerabilities — or variables, rather. It’s a good place to be in a penetration point of view.”

He means these items are easy to hack, and there’s a lot of evidence to back up that claim. A study last year by the software security firm Veracode found numerous basic security vulnerabilities in devices like garage door openers and some widely sold hubs used to build a home IoT network. And as another study in 2014 by the security arm of Hewlett-Packard found, those devices often leave the factory with default passwords like “12345” enabled and no requirement to change them.

Finally, in a comment that sounds awfully like a plot point from the TV series “Homeland,” reported by The Intercept, Ledgett said the agency’s research extends into potentially exploiting biomedical devices like pacemakers as a possible “tool in the toolbox.” He went on to say, though, that it’s easier to keep track of foreign spies and terrorism suspects through other means.

Ledgett is the latest to elaborate on the U.S. intelligence community’s thinking about the potential for IoT spying. In comments during a U.S. Senate hearing earlier this year, James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, said intelligence services spying on the U.S. might target devices for use in surveillance, eavesdropping, recruiting sources or to gain access to networks. What he didn’t say at the time was whether or how U.S. spy agencies might do the same thing.

10 Jun 19:45

Slack was down for 90 minutes today, which means people made fun of it on Twitter

by Arik Hesseldahl

A FOMO epidemic sweeps through countless offices.

Slack, the cloud-based office messaging tool used by more than three million people every day is experiencing what is at least a partial outage to the service.

And as usually happens in these situations, people affected by it all took to Twitter to make a little fun. As of about 11:25 am PT it was said to be coming back up, though residual problems are still ongoing. You can check its status here.

Slack’s latest message about the outage at 11:36 AM said the service and its API were "...confirmed to be functioning well,” but that the fix had affected uploads and downloads of files. “They may be very slow or fail outright and we are implementing a fix for this problem immediately.”

And this from our own Peter Kafka:

10 Jun 18:28

Here's why Amazon, Google, and Apple are fighting over voice-activated home devices (AMZN, GOOG, AAPL)

by Eugene Kim

Amazon's voice-activated speaker Echo has been one of the surprise hit products of the year. Now, Google is out with its own voice-controlled speaker, and Apple is also reported to be in the works for its own device.

Voice-assistance technology may sound like a novelty, but recent data by Kleiner Perkins show why all the big tech companies are jumping on this new opportunity. As this chart by Statista shows, based on data from Kleiner Perkins, 65% of US smartphone owners already use voice assistance technology, up more than double from just two years ago. 

The primary reason for using voice-assistance technology is simply because of its convenience. The top three reasons for using the technology were all related to convenience, with 61% of the respondents saying it's useful when hands/vision is occupied.

20160610_Voice_Assistance

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10 Jun 18:25

Whatsapp competitor Line has filed to go public

by Portia Crowe

Line app CEO Takeshi Idezawa

Japan's most popular messaging app, Line, has filed to go public.

The Tokyo-based company announced its plans to list 35 million shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and New York Stock Exchange in a regulatory filing on Friday.

It plans to go public on July 15, according to The Wall Street Journal's Alexander Martin, who first reported the filing.

Line is a subsidiary of the South Korean company Naver Corp. It had 218 million monthly active users as of March, according to the filing.

Line, like the popular messaging app Whatsapp, lets users make free voice calls and send free text messages from anywhere in the world.

The app is used in 230 countries around the world, according to Jeanie Han, the CEO of LINE Euro-Americas, who spoke to Business Insider's James Cook in March.

It started out as a tool to help people stay in touch following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake in Japan, but now consists of 65 different apps.

Celebrities including Paul McCartney, Taylor Swift, and Maroon 5 also use the app to promote their music.

Morgan Stanley, Nomura, Goldman Sach, and JPMorgan are acting as joint global coordinators on the deal.

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10 Jun 18:24

These 5 companies are leading the driverless car race

by Danielle Muoio

volvo driverless car animation

Brad Templeton has been involved with self-driving cars since the early days.

He's a consultant on Google's driverless car project and frequently lectures on automated transportation. Tech Insider sat down with Templeton to talk what companies are leading the driverless car race at Exponential Finance, a two-day conference on AI and robotics sponsored by CNBC and Silicon Valley think-tank Singularity University.

Here's Templeton's take on the 5 companies leading the way:

SEE ALSO: Google's moonshot boss reportedly huffed out of a meeting with the writers of HBO's 'Silicon Valley'

Google

OK, it's a bit obvious Templeton would choose Google considering his relationship with the company. But it would seem odd not to include Google on the list anyway, considering the tech giant's fleet has collected over 1.5 million autonomous miles.

"And that's not just highways, but regular roads too," he told Tech Insider. "That's more than everyone else put together."



Daimler

Templeton said it very succinctly: "Daimler is very high up, by the way."

And it makes sense. The Mercedes-Benz big-rig made history last year for driving itself on a public road. And the Mercedes 2017 E-Class (above) is loaded with semi-autonomous functions, like active lane change assist and the ability to drive autonomously on highways at speeds reaching 130 miles per hour.



Volvo

Templeton said after Daimler, Volvo was a close follow-up. Not many people think of Volvo when it comes to technologically innovative cars, but it's quietly becoming a major contender in the autonomous vehicle space

The Swedish company will release Pilot Assist II next year, allowing its new vehicle to do all the steering and braking at 80 miles per hour. The automaker is also launching several driverless pilot programs in different cities in 2017.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
08 Jun 15:57

The app boom is over

by Peter Kafka

Your phone is full of apps, and you're done downloading new ones — unless they're Snapchat or Uber.

The mobile app boom kicked off in July 2008, when Apple introduced the App Store. Now it is over.

People are still making plenty of apps, of course. And many people are still downloading them. But the go-go growth days are gone.

If you are an independent app developer or publisher, you have probably known this for a while, because you have found it very difficult to get people to download your app — the average American smartphone user downloads zero apps per month.

But now even the very biggest app publishers are seeing their growth slow down or stop altogether. Most people have all the apps they want and/or need. They're not looking for new ones.

Last month, the top 15 app publishers saw downloads drop an average of 20 percent in the U.S., according to research from Nomura, which relies on data from app tracker SensorTower.

Globally, the mobile phone market is still growing, so the app market is as well. But not by much.

Outside the U.S., the top 15 apps grew by 3 percent last month.

You'll note that the big exceptions here are Snapchat and Uber, which continue to grow at an astonishing clip.

In May 2015, users downloaded Evan Spiegel's messaging app 13 million times; in May 2016 that number had doubled to 27 million. Uber's growth rate is also above 100 percent.

And in the U.S., Snapchat's download rate has now eclipsed Facebook.

So you can still break through the saturated app market, if you are very very very lucky, and good. But the odds are stacked against you.

Download rates don't give you a full picture of an app publisher's business, of course. Facebook, for instance, is killing it even as its install numbers slow — once you get to 1.65 billion users, it gets harder to find new ones.

And the fact that it's harder for app publishers to find users is good news for Facebook's app install ad business, which is aimed at app publishers who need to find users.

08 Jun 15:57

Hewlett Packard Enterprise and GE are teaming up on the Internet of Things

by Arik Hesseldahl

The pair will jointly go after business in the aerospace, energy and automotive industries.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise will team up with the industrial giant GE in a new effort to go after the market to connect industrial machinery to the internet.

In a deal announced today at an HPE conference in Las Vegas, the two companies will combine their strengths to attack the fast-moving market for the Internet of Things.

GE, known for its wind turbines, jet engines and train locomotives, has in the last few years strongly embraced software and the ability to analyze data as the way to squeeze more efficiency out of them. It's a point it tries to drive home with humor in its recent series of TV ads.

GE also has Predix, a cloud service for connecting and managing devices. HPE will be GE's preferred hardware vendor when its customers deploy Predix.

HPE's Executive VP John Hinshaw said the two companies will jointly go after business in the aerospace, oil and gas and manufacturing industries, and have been doing so informally for awhile.

"What we're talking about is connecting hundreds of thousands of big machines, and each one of those is surrounded by thousands of little machines," GE Digital CEO Bill Ruh said in an interview. Last year he predicted that GE's digital products like Predix would bring in $15 billion by 2020, and more disclosures from GE about the size of that business are expected this month.

If you remember Marc Andreessen's prediction that software is eating the world, this is the sort of thing he meant. Here's one example: The sensors in jet engines create dozens of gigabytes of data per flight. That data can be analyzed for problems that can be corrected to make the engines run better or use less fuel. Useful if you're an airline trying to keep fuel and maintenance costs down.

Two things GE doesn't have: The basic computing and networking hardware needed to handle all the data, and the reach to traditional IT customers who buy it. HPE brings both to the table.

Still, IoT efforts get a lot of hype but aren't showing much in the way of results. The main complaint is that all the connected things are generating so much data that there's no efficient way to analyze it all to find those money-saving insights without investing huge amounts in more computing hardware and highly paid analysts.

That hasn't stopped a lot of tech players. Networking giant Cisco Systems spent more than $1 billion to buy Jasper, a cloud-based IoT service, and has a strong lead with car manufacturers. Just last week, Cisco teamed up with IBM, a significant HPE rival, to push IoT data into its Watson cognitive computing system. Expect more deals and more hype in the coming months.

08 Jun 02:21

Everybody can now try Microsoft's wacky work-sharing app that's so crazy it might just take off (MSFT)

by Matt Weinberger

gigjam ios

Last summer, Microsoft announced a new work-sharing app called GigJam — an idea for breaking work down into "molecules" and then sharing it.

Today, Microsoft is launching a free public preview beta of GigJam, so that anyone and everyone can install it on their Windows PCs, Macs, iPhones, and iPads and give it a whirl.

It was hard to understand GigJam before I saw it. But last September, I witnessed a demo of the app, and I have to say: GigJam is so crazy that it just might work.

Here's a quick look at GigJam and how it works.

 

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GigJam will work on smartphones, Windows, and Mac.



Basically, it lets you pull up a bunch of business data from various sources — Salesforce, Outlook, Microsoft Office 365, LinkedIn, whatever — either by typing or by using voice controls.



You circle the stuff you want to share with either your finger or stylus, and "X" out the stuff you don't want other people to see.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
07 Jun 18:36

What Twilio's IPO Filing Means for the API Economy

by PatricioRobles

Cloud communications platform Twilio, which offers a suite of APIs for text messaging, VoIP and voice, has filed its S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), setting the stage for the company to raise up to $100 million in an initial public offering (IPO). 

07 Jun 14:38

Here's why Chromebooks are going to be so awesome

by Steve Kovach

Chromebooks are about to get a major upgrade.

Later this year, Chromebooks will be able to run Android apps, which means they'll be fully-capable computers for the first time. That means no more doing everything in the Chrome browser. Soon, you'll be able to run apps just like you can on a "normal" PC or Mac.

Google recently gave a demo to app developers that shows how Android apps on Chromebook improves the overall experience, and it really is impressive. Once Android apps arrive on Chromebooks, you'll only have to spend about $200 to get a really great computer.

Here's what it looks like:

Soon, the Google Play Store will show up in your Chromebook's taskbar.

google play store chromebook

That means you'll be able to download apps that work offline on your computer, just like you can on a traditional PC or Mac.

google play window on chromebook

At last, you'll be able to run apps that have been missing from Chromebook all these years. Here's Photoshop, for example:

photoshop running on chromebook android app

And Microsoft Word:

microsoft word android app on chromebook

You'll finally be able to download movies and watch them offline too:

google play offline movies on chromebook

Or play games:

android games running on chromebook

Pretty cool, right? If you've used a Chromebook before, then you know how big of a deal this is. Your Chromebook will finally be able to do just about everything a PC or Mac can do. For everyone else, that means you don't have to worry about spending $1,000 on a computer.

You can watch Google's video demo of Android apps running on Chromebook below. But only watch the first 10 minutes or so. The rest is a bunch of technical geek-speak for developers.

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06 Jun 05:02

Verizon's "Can You Hear Me Now" guy is Sprint's pitch-man now

by Amy Keyishian

A new commercial debuts during tonight's NBA Finals game.

You may not recognize Paul Marcarelli's name, but you know his face. It looms into your vision every time you're on a cellphone call and you say, "Can you hear me now? Heh, I'm like that guy in the commercial."

But Marcarelli, who stopped doing ads for Verizon in 2011, has a new gig, working as a pitchman for rival Sprint, whose service he signed up for after he was approached by the company.

He spent nine years working for Verizon on the campaign, during which he was voted Most Mysterious Pitchman by Entertainment Weekly in 2002. The Atlantic caught up with him in 2011, when he revealed that gave up his beloved Buddy Holly glasses frames to reduce the number of "can you hear me now"s he'd hear on a daily basis.

But he was also able to use the cash from the campaign to produce plays for his New York-based theater group, Mobius Group, as well as executive-producing documentaries and his own writing projects.

Sprint is debuting the new commercial during the NBA Finals; a statement from Sprint says it's the perfect time to scoop him up, as the wireless company now claims that its reliability is within 1% of that of Verizon and AT&T and leaves T-Mobile in the dust.

Of course, Sprint also says it offers service for half the price of rivals, a claim that recently got it in trouble.

03 Jun 17:28

Here's how the web gets 'conversation-optimized'

by Dries Buytaert

The technology behind websites must adapt to a world where people are regularly speaking or texting with computers.

Ever since IBM's Watson beat its first human "Jeopardy" contestants, people have been fascinated with the idea of talking to computers. In recent months, there has been lots of buzz about conversational technology — including Amazon Echo (a.k.a. Alexa), Facebook’s Messenger and Microsoft’s "Conversation-as-a-Platform." An impressive new entrant in the field of AI-powered assistants, Viv promises to answer even the most complicated queries that include a user’s social graph and contextual information.

The real question is not whether technologies like Alexa, Viv or Messenger will replace the traditional web, but how can the web work better to supply conversational technologies with information. Individuals and companies will continue to create websites for a long time, but the technology behind websites must adapt to a world where people are regularly speaking or texting with computers.

The web community optimizes for new platforms

Overall, I’m pretty optimistic about making conversational technologies work on the web. I don’t define "the web" as websites alone, but rather as any user experience that’s delivered across multiple channels and devices. New user experience and distribution platforms only come along every five to 10 years, and when they do, they cause massive shifts in the web’s underlying technology. The last big one was mobile, and the web industry adapted.

The first thing to evolve for mobile was content strategy: People optimized headlines and began designing layouts for smaller screens. Next, the technology had to evolve to keep up, with solutions emerging such as responsive design, push notifications, native application development frameworks and more. The same is true with conversational technologies; it’s first about optimizing content, and then about working on the technology to make these changes second nature.

Video: A glimpse into the future

Web developers and site builders are now contending with experiences across platforms including watches, cars, voice assistants and more. But how do we create a better two-way "conversation" between various platforms and the existing web? Luckily, many devices like Amazon Echo have fairly open developer ecosystems for testing.

My team recently built a demo for Echo based on a hypothetical supermarket chain called Gourmet Market. Gourmet Market wants its customers to not only use the website, but also Echo or push notifications to do business with them. We built a website using the content management system Drupal 8 and connected it to Amazon Echo to have her "answer" questions about which produce items were on sale. In this demo, Alexa also notified a customer via text when a certain requested item went on sale in the future. While this seems like a relatively simple user experience — ask question, get information, set notifications for future — no website offers this capability today, to the best of my knowledge.

Today, hardly anyone questions whether to build a mobile-optimized website. A decade from now, we’ll be saying the same thing about optimizing content for voice or chat commands.


In oversimplified terms, we taught Alexa to talk to the Gourmet Market website by programming a specific "Skill," or custom capability. On the website’s side, a store manager can tag certain items as "on sale," and Alexa's voice responses will automatically and instantly reflect those changes. The store manager needs no expertise in programming — Alexa composes its response by talking to Drupal 8 using web service APIs.

Today, hardly anyone questions whether to build a mobile-optimized website. A decade from now, we’ll be saying the same thing about optimizing content for voice or chat commands. The convenience of the customer experience will be a key differentiator. As a result, no one will think twice about optimizing their websites for multiple interaction patterns, including conversational interfaces like voice and chat. Anyone will be able to deliver a continuous user experience across multiple channels, devices and interaction patterns.

Echo and other conversational technologies are proof that the web is undergoing a massive re-architecture to bring relevant content directly to the consumer. It won’t be long until music fans can use voice interfaces to get alerted when their favorite artists are touring through town and purchase tickets. Patients could automatically re-order prescriptions from the pharmacy when their supply was running low. Commuters could be told to bring an umbrella to work before having to ask their virtual assistants anything about the weather. Once we master multichannel content delivery, each new technology will become infinitely more useful to people around the world.


Dries Buytaert is an open source developer and a technology executive. He is the creator and project lead for Drupal, an open source platform for building websites. Buytaert is also the co-founder and chief technology officer of Acquia, a company that helps large organizations build, deliver and optimize digital experiences. He blogs frequently on Drupal, open source, startups, business and the future at buytaert.net. Reach him @dries.

02 Jun 23:39

Meeker for Millennials

by Brad Feld

Terry Kawaja is brilliant. I give you three minutes of his amazingness.

That is all.

The post Meeker for Millennials appeared first on Feld Thoughts.

02 Jun 17:07

Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins has finally made the internal power move that everyone was waiting for

by Julie Bort

Cisco Chuck Robbins1

Cisco's legendary engineers that run Cisco's most important business unit are being moved to advisory roles within the company, reports Recode's Arik Hesseldahl.

And with that move, CEO Chuck Robbins has officially squirmed out from under the long shadow of his predecessor, John Chambers, currently executive chairman.

That's because these engineers – Mario Mazzola, Prem Jain, and Luca Cafiero – were responsible for nearly all of the company's major new products via Chamber's unusual "spin-in" financing.

A "spin-in" is where Cisco was the sole investor in their companies with a pre-arranged agreement that Cisco would buy their company once the product was complete. Over the previous 20 years, Chambers has funneled $2.38 billion to them and their teams via these "spin-ins."

These engineers were running Cisco's Insieme team, the last spin-in to be acquired and the unit responsible for Cisco's flagship network product, the Nexus 9000.

Cisco MarioPremLucaWhen Robbins took over as CEO about a year ago, many people old us that he hadn't really grabbed the power center of the company because these engineers continued to report to Chambers.

We also heard rumblings that the engineers could soon be working on another product for Cisco, but Robbins publicly said he had no plans to do more spin-ins. 

The spin-ins were controversial within the company and created a culture of have and have-nots between employees selected to work on those teams and get those big financial rewards, and those who weren't, some Cisco engineers complained.

Since he took over, Robbins has been systematically reorganizing the company, putting his own people in all the key spots. In March, he reorganized into new business units to pursue new growth areas for Cisco.

Robbins also announced that David Goeckler, a senior VP who ran Cisco's security business, has been promoted to run the enterprise networking group. Long-time engineering leader leader Pankaj Patel announced he was retiring in January.

Cisco could not be immediately reached for comment.

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02 Jun 17:04

Walmart is developing a drone

by Richard Feloni

drone ces

Walmart is getting into the drone game.

Walmart's VP of Emerging Sciences Shekar Natarajan demoed the retailer's new technology to reporters from a Bentonville, Arkansas, distribution center on Thursday, on the eve of its annual shareholders meeting.

The drone technology will be replacing the jobs of inventory quality assurance employees, cutting inventory checks across massive distribution centers (the one in Bentonville is 1.2 million square feet) from one month down to a single day.

When Natarajan joined Walmart in November 2014, he and his team were tasked with investigating cutting-edge technologies, asking, "How can we can converge them in ways that make sense for us?" he said.

The application at the top of the list was using drone technology to improve the safety and efficiency of Walmart's 190 US distribution centers.

In collaboration with the Federal Aviation Administration and NASA, Walmart is developing internally autonomous drone technology that allows a quad-copter drone, roughly 3 feet by 3 feet, to take 30 images per second from a top-mounted camera.

The camera is linked to a control center and scans for tracking number matches. Matches are registered as green, empty spaces as blue, and mismatches as red. An employee monitors the drone's progress from a computer screen.

Natarajan said that the technology is six to nine months from maturation. Because it is still in the early development phase, there is not yet a specific launch plan, but Walmart is planning to integrate the drones into all of its distribution centers. The company also noted that employees who served as inventory checkers will be given new job opportunities to ensure a smooth transition.

Walmart did not reveal how much money it has invested in its Emerging Sciences division, but noted that future applications of the drone, as well as other artificial intelligence and virtual reality projects, are in the works.

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02 Jun 16:18

Uber is going to pick up cyclists in a city that has more bikes than people

by Sam Shead

UberBIKE

Uber has launched a new service called UberBIKE in Amsterdam — a city home to more bikes than people.

The service, announced on Thursday on Uber's website, allows cyclists to open up their Uber app and request an Uber with a bike rack.

When the UberX arrives, the bike is mounted to the back of the car and the customer is charged the same as a regular UberX, plus an addition €4 for the bike.

Uber envisages that cyclists will use the service if it starts raining or if their legs get too tired to get them to their intended destination.

In the Netherlands, there are around 18 million bicycles and 17 million people so each person has a bicycle, or even more than one, according to Saskia Kluit of the Dutch Bicycle Association.

The transportation giant, which raised $3.5 billion from Saudi Arabia on Thursday, has not previously tried to gain business from cyclists. If the initiative works in Amsterdam then it could be rolled out other cities with large numbers of cyclists.

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