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Folge 2/4: Spotify geht in einigen europäischen Ländern online und ist ein Hit. Die Funktionalität und Beliebtheit des Programms bleibt auch der Konkurrenz von Google und Apple nicht verborgen. Spotify muss schnell wachsen und sich Marktanteile sichern, um wettbewerbsfähig zu bleiben. Gleichzeitig beginnt die Smartphone-Revolution und Spotify muss zusehen, auch als Mobile-App Fuß zu fassen. Obwohl die Auszahlungen an die Musikbranche steigen, sind die Labels weiterhin skeptisch und Spotify ist noch weit davon entfernt, profitabel zu sein. Folge „Kampf der Unternehmen“ jetzt in deiner Podcast-App, um keine Folge zu verpassen.Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.
Explore the exciting world of digital transformation and its impact on casino marketing. Discover how casinos can harness the power of smartphones, mobile apps, and data-driven strategies to create more engaging, profitable customer experiences. Whether you're a marketing director at a regional casino, a general manager, or part of a casino marketing team, this episode is packed with actionable insights to help you stay ahead in the rapidly evolving digital landscape. Learn more at www.jcarcamoassociates.com/. Get insights delivered to your inbox: www.jcarcamoassociates.com/casino-mark…newsletter/ Join the most effective casino marketing training. https://casinomarketingbootcamp.com/
Künstliche Intelligenz? Gähn. Lasst uns bloß damit in Ruhe. — So oder ähnlich reagieren viele genervte Anwender, die den Hype um KI nicht mehr hören können. Zu lange und zu oft wurde versprochen, dass Siri damit endlich verstehen würde, was wir meinen. Die tatsächlich erbrachten Ergebnisse haben nie viel getaugt. Doch plötzlich gelang ein immenser Durchbruch. Man hat entdeckt, wie es funktioniert. Der Aufwand dafür ist gigantisch, aber die Ergebnisse sind absolut verblüffend. Es ist längst kein Geheimnis mehr: Dies ist die neue Epoche nach der Smartphone-Revolution. Vermutlich sogar größer. In der Sendung möchten wir alle ins Boot holen, die noch skeptisch sind und die nicht wissen, ob sie sich wirklich für das neue Zeug interessieren sollen. Kann nicht einfach alles so bleiben, wie es war?
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Foreign Policy managing editor and former CNN South Asia bureau chief Ravi Agrawal takes us on a journey across India, through remote rural villages and massive metropolises, to highlight how one tiny device - the smartphone - is effecting staggering changes across all facets of Indian life. The rise of smartphones, and with them access to the internet, has caused nothing short of a revolution in India. In the West, technological advances have progressed step-by-step - from dial-up Internet connections, to broadband access, to wireless, and now 4G data on phones. But the vast majority of Indians, particularly low-income and rural citizens, have leapfrogged straight to the smartphone era, disrupting centuries of tradition and barriers of wealth, language, caste, and gender. As always with India, the numbers are staggering: in 2000, 20 million Indians had access to the internet; by 2017, 465 million were online, with three Indians discovering the internet every second - mostly on smartphones. Agrawal shows how widespread internet use is poised to transform everyday life in India: the status of women, education, jobs, dating, marriage, family life, commerce, and governance. Just as the car shaped 20th century America - with the creation of the Interstate Highway System, suburbia, and malls - the smartphone is set to shape 21st century India. Nothing is untouched, from arranged marriages to social status to business start-ups, as smartphones move the entire economy from cash-based to credit-based. Access to the internet is affecting the progress of progress itself. As Agrawal shows, while they offer immediate and sometimes mind-altering access to so much for so many, smartphones create no immediate utopia in a culture still driven by poverty, a caste system, gender inequality, illiteracy, and income disparity. Internet access has provided greater opportunities to women and changed the way in which India's many illiterate poor can interact with the world, but it has also meant that pornography and fake news have become much more widespread. Under a government keen to control content, it has created tensions. And in a climate of nationalism, it has fomented violence and even terrorism. What effect is this staggering technological revolution having on India's ancient political, cultural, and economic institutions? Keep listening to find out. Originally published in January of 2019. Visit http://g.co/TalksAtGoogle/SmartphoneRevolution to watch the video.
Android expert Aditya Shenoy joins host Pranay Parab to talk about the Realme C3. Realme C3 (0:30) Build and design Realme's budget phone strategy Performance Battery life Cameras Software: Android 10 on a budget phone Cameras and other cons Competition
Smartphones have changed the world. But something quite peculiar has happened in India where the use of the smartphone challenges many social norms and yet supports and upholds other time held traditions. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/invisibleindia/support
In this episode, we do a speech analysis of a TED talk by Chiki Sarkar "India's smartphone revolution." Enjoy!
Welcome back from Miami, Michi! Sein wohlverdienter Urlaub war freilich der einzige Grund für unsere Podcast-Pause... not.rnDafür hatte Stephan Zeit, direkt am Release-Tag Endgame zu gucken. Wir versprechen: Wir bleiben spoilerfrei. Garantiert, sonst hätte Stephan längst Würgemale von Michi am Hals und würde am Krückstock laufen. Von MCU zu Disney (denen gehört schließlich Marvel): Mitte/Ende des Jahres soll in den USA der neue Streaming-Dienst des Entertainment-Giganten starten - und langsam aber sicher gehen die (benötigten?) Abos ins Geld! Wird Streaming das neue Kabelfernsehen?rnrnWir schweifen kurz ab zur Apple Veranstaltung von Ende März mit Apple TV+, Apple News+ und einer Apple Kreditkarte mit den Sympathieträgern von Goldman Sachs. Für Deutschland bzw. Michael war erstmal mix dabei. Dafür hat er sich neue AirPods aus USA mitgebracht. rnrnTeuer ebenfalls (dafür offenbar weniger brauchbar): Das Samsung Galaxy Fold. Nach dem Galaxy-Note-7-Desaster (ihr wisst schon: Handy-Akku macht PUFF!) die nächste Hiobsbotschaft. Die Südkoreaner wollen ein faltbares Smartphone auf den Markt bringen. Das kaputt geht... wenn es gefaltet wird, wie mehrere Tech-Journalisten berichten. Schon schade: Es hätte eine Smartphone-Revolution einläuten können.rnrnShameless self promotion: Das newscamp in Augsburg (15/16. Mai) ist für Medienschaffende echt ein Highlight! Außerdem könnt ihr Michi dort live anplaudern. Stephan womöglich auch, sollte sein Kind dann nicht schon unterwegs sein. ;-)
Sleep is not for the weak. It is however, for bitches. And as we establish, Gris and I are very much bitches.
Click here for more episodes from this series. Fundamentals is a new show from Fidelity Answers that taps the brains of our analysts for on-the-ground insights from around the world about the industries and businesses you're investing in. From trends to disruptions, from political upheavals to changing regulation, how are corporates responding to the growing complexity of global business and less predictable markets? Who will be the winners and who the losers? -> Advances in material technology are paving the way for a smartphone revolution and it looks as though China will be the one leading the way. In fact China, long regarded as a copycat and laggard in the tech sector, is set to become a world leader not just in smartphones but a whole host of other related industries. What could this mean for the way you use your phone? What about the impact on suppliers and other big players in the smartphone sector? And how should investors be thinking about what could be the biggest gear shift in the industry since Apple launched the iPhone? In this podcast, Asia Editor Neil Gough talks to Fidelity's Casey McLean, an equity analyst covering tech hardware, semiconductors and the smartphone supply chain across Asia, and Peter Carter, an equity analyst with a focus on tech hardware and industrial automation in China.
Click here for more episodes from this series. Fundamentals is a new show from Fidelity Answers that taps the brains of our analysts for on-the-ground insights from around the world about the industries and businesses you're investing in. From trends to disruptions, from political upheavals to changing regulation, how are corporates responding to the growing complexity of global business and less predictable markets? Who will be the winners and who the losers? -> Advances in material technology are paving the way for a smartphone revolution and it looks as though China will be the one leading the way. In fact China, long regarded as a copycat and laggard in the tech sector, is set to become a world leader not just in smartphones but a whole host of other related industries. What could this mean for the way you use your phone? What about the impact on suppliers and other big players in the smartphone sector? And how should investors be thinking about what could be the biggest gear shift in the industry since Apple launched the iPhone? In this podcast, Asia Editor Neil Gough talks to Fidelity's Casey McLean, an equity analyst covering tech hardware, semiconductors and the smartphone supply chain across Asia, and Peter Carter, an equity analyst with a focus on tech hardware and industrial automation in China.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Alles zum Start des Samsung Galaxy S10 und Fold. Was taugen die Neuheiten und wie groß ist der Markt für ein 2000-Euro-Handy? Außerdem geht es im Podcast um die Geräte, die uns nächste Woche auf der Handy-Messe MWC in Barcelona erwarten.
Just as the automobile transformed the lives of Americans 100 years ago, so the smartphone is having the same effect on the country of India. That’s the view of Ravi Agrawal, Managing Editor of Foreign Policy and author of India Connected: How the Smartphone is Transforming the World's Largest Democracy. Smartphone sales may be slowing globally, but not in India. It’s the second largest phone market in the world after China with over 430 million users. And still, that only accounts for 45% of the addressable market. In other words, while demand for smartphones in most parts of the world is slowing, the appetite in India is accelerating. To grasp the significance of the meteoric growth of smartphones in India, I asked Ravi to put things in context. What does it mean now and what could it mean in a few years’ time when smartphones become ubiquitous?
India has the second largest population of any country in the world -- yet it has only 50 decent bookshops, says publisher Chiki Sarkar. So she asked herself: How do we get more people reading books? Find out how Sarkar is tapping into India's smartphone revolution to create a new generation of readers and writers in this fun talk about a fresh kind of storytelling. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
India has the second largest population of any country in the world -- yet it has only 50 decent bookstores, says publisher Chiki Sarkar. So she asked herself: How do we get more people reading books? Find out how Sarkar is tapping into India's smartphone revolution to create a new generation of readers and writers in this fun talk about a fresh kind of storytelling.
Spend any time in the slums of Nairobi, or rural Bangladesh and it is hard not to be struck by the proliferation of mobile phones. Many of the poorest households, often without access to electricity or running water, will own a cell phone. Many of the poorest countries in the world are in the midst … Continue reading "No More Banana Phones: How the Smartphone Revolution is Changing the Fight Against Global Poverty"
Ist China inzwischen längst das innovativere Silicon Valley? Sollten wir für neue Trends nach Fernost schauen statt in die USA? t3n.de-Chefredakteur Stephan Dörner spricht dazu im Podcast mit China-Experte Tu-Lam Pham. Insgesamt neun der 20 größten Internet-Unternehmen der Welt kommen aus China. Die Volksrepublik ist ein „Mobile only“-Land, das die Nutzung von PCs und Laptops größtenteils übersprungen hat und bei vielen Themen vom mobilen Bezahlen bis zum Buchen von Arztterminen über das Smartphone sämtlichen westlichen Ländern längst davongezogen ist. Tu-Lam Pham, Berater für digitales Business, kennt durch seine Reisen ins Silicon Valley und nach China beide Welten. Im Gespräch mit t3n.de-Chefredakteur Stephan Dörner spricht er darüber, was China dem Westen voraus hat – und wie die Smartphone-Revolution das Land tiefgreifend verändert hat. Mit welchen harten Bandagen kämpft Alibaba gegen Tencent und umgekehrt? Werden die alten Tech-Größen aus China – Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent – auch bekannt als BAT-Ökonomie gerade durch ein neues Tech-Triumvirat aus Toutiao, Meituan-Dianping und Didi Chuxing abgelöst, auch bekannt als TMD? Und was können wir von all dem in Europa und Deutschland lernen? Tu-Lam Pham gewährt einen Einblick in die Digitalwirtschaft Chinas, die den Detailgrad der üblichen Presseartikel zum Thema weit übersteigt. Hinweis: Der Podcast wurde bereits am 15. August 2018 aufgenommen, da wir in den vergangenen Wochen immer Podcasts hatten, die einen aktuellen Zeitbezug hatten und daher zeitnah online gestellt werden mussten. Zum Zeitpunkt des Podcasts gab es nur einen Amazon-Go-Store in den USA, inzwischen gibt es drei. Sponsor-Hinweis (Anzeige): Der heutige Podcast wird von Ottonova präsentiert – der komplett digitalen Krankenversicherung: https://www.ottonova.de/lp/ebook-t3n
DSGVO-Beschwerden gegen Android, Instagram, Whatsapp und Facebook Die von dem Datenschutzaktivisten Max Schrems vergangenes Jahr ins Leben gerufene Datenschutz-Plattform noyb hat nach eigenen Angaben pünktlich zum Wirksamwerden der Datenschutzgrundverordnung vier Beschwerden gegen Google für Android, Instagram, Whatsapp und Facebook eingereicht. In den sehr ähnlichen Texten kritisiert noyb, dass die Dienste breite Zustimmung zu neuen Datenschutzerklärungen verlangen und Nutzer andernfalls aussperren wollen. Das verstoße gegen die DSGVO und könne Milliardenstrafen nach sich ziehen. Bundesfreiwilligendienst erhält digitale Variante Der Bund möchte mehr freiwillige Helfer gewinnen, die das nötige Grundwissen für Computer und Internet in Kitas, Schulen, Seniorenheimen und anderen Einrichtungen vermitteln. Bei dem bundesweiten "Freiwilligen Sozialen Jahr digital" besuchen junge Leute im Alter bis zu 26 Jahren ab Herbst 2018 zuerst Fortbildungen und geben dann ihr digitales Wissen weiter. Das "Freiwillige Soziale Jahr digital" soll auch in den Bundesfreiwilligendienst übertragbar sein. iPhone-Designverletzung: Samsung muss zahlen Eine US-Jury hat entschieden, dass Samsung für die Verletzung von iPhone-Geschmacksmustern und Patenten eine gute halbe Milliarde US-Dollar zahlen muss. Das ist weniger als von Apple gefordert, aber weit mehr als von Samsung erwartet. In einer Stellungnahme wertete Apple die jüngste Entscheidung auch als einen moralischen Sieg: "Apple hat mit dem iPhone die Smartphone-Revolution entfacht, und Tatsache ist, dass Samsung offensichtlich unser Design kopiert hat". Alexa versendet selbstständig Privatgespräch Amazons Sprachassistentin Alexa hat ein Gespräch eines Ehepaars im US-Bundesstaat Oregon ohne deren Wissen aufgezeichnet und an einen Mitarbeiter versendet. Das Ehepaar hat erst davon erfahren, nachdem sie von dem Angestellten darauf hingewiesen wurden, der zunächst einen gehackten Account vermutete. Amazon hat den Vorfall rekonstruiert und spricht von einer Verkettung unwahrscheinlicher Umstände. Diese und alle weiteren aktuellen Nachrichten finden Sie auf heise.de
It’s been 10 years since smartphones really became mainstream. Our handsets are faster, smaller and better connected but can they really do anything new? Will we spend the next 10 years pushing virtual buttons on a small black screen or will the desire for new technologies like argument reality and cybernetics finally push us outside the box. Scott and Ed geek out on the possibilities.
The Smart Phone Revolution is dead. Long live the Smart Phone Revolution. There's a rising backlash against the smartphone dominant culture we find ourselves living in these days and that backlash is finally catching steam. I read an article today called "We've reached peak smartphone" and it captures some of the smartphone angst that's growing every day right now, including this quote: "Smartphones are in a ridiculously boring place." Are they? Or does such a statement say more about the author than the state of smartphones. I don't find my smartphone boring when I'm getting the latest real-time commentary about the stock market from people I respect on Scutify or when I open the Marketwatch app to read the articles they're featuring. I don't think it's boring when I check my stock portfolios on my brokers' apps on my smartphone. In fact, I prefer to use the apps over their websites even when I'm in front of my computer these days. When I read headlines, answer emails, talk on the phone, update my social media, post pictures, text and message friends and so on, I'm pretty sure none of that is ridiculously boring. Moreover, it's not like we've seen the end of innovation in smartphones. Smartphones are going to become ever more interactive with our voices, our gestures and our actions. Siri still sucks right now, but in another five years with lots of artificial intelligence and other improvements, it and other voice interactions will actually be helpful. Motion sensors in smartphones will make it easier to navigate from one app to another without having to touch your screen. Wearables will also tie into smartphones and will enable both voice, motion and other interactions and features -- in another five years. You can't take the snapshot of smartphone technology in 2016 and think it will apply in 2020. Smartphones, and future versions of "smartphones" are going to be the dominant personal computing center for billions of people for the next couple decades. Smartphone fatigue is another factor that's impacting the way people think about the smartphone market right now. I'm sick of people looking at their smartphones, checking facebook, group messaging friends, reading emails, checking the news or otherwise not focusing on the real world going on around them. And I'm as bad as most other people about doing that too. We're all sick of smartphone-dominant culture, but we all do our part to create that smartphone-dominant culture anyway. Is that going to change?
Despite all my harsh criticisms and outright anger over bailouts, corporatist government policies, a race to devalue our nation's currency, zero percent interest rates enabling public debt creation that our grandchildren will have to pay back and so on... For the last twenty years, I've often written and said on TV that "There's never been a better time and place to be alive than right here in the US, right now." I have bet my career and money on continued technological revolutions creating prosperity and wealth. Over the last dozen years or so, I've been betting that career and money on such big drivers as the Search Revolution, the iPod Revolution, the Internet Video Revolution, the Smartphone Revolution, the Cloud Revolution, the App Revolution among others. Trillions of dollars of market value have been created by the companies that have driven these revolutions. A few themes stick out when I look at the history of Tech Revolutions over the last twenty years. One is that the big get bigger and it's often a winner-takes-all or sometimes two or three winners take all. Another important theme is that even within these revolutions that end up creating long-term trillion dollar values, there are cycles of boom, bust, bubble and crash. How many times has Apple, Amazon, Google and crashed over the many years that I've owned them, only to come back and hit new highs as their earnings and/or revenue growth rocked everybody's world's over the years. And you have to be careful not to get into tech revolutions too early. Here's a great comment and picture that I saw on Scutify today: LunaticTrader - Who doesn't remember 1963? A Luxemburg born inventor demonstrated his "television goggles", now better known as a VR headset. He was only 50 years too early with his idea. His name was Hugo Gernsback: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... #VR You need to be careful about picking the technological revolutions you invest in. 3-D printing investors have learned the hard way that if you invest too early in the revolution, however real it ultimately might turn out to be, that you can still lose your shirt if the tectonic plates aren't actually moving yet. In contrast, you can already see the technological tectonic plates shifting for a Virtual Reality Revolution that will change the way we watch movies, surf the Internet, do surgery and socialize on Facebook. The fact remains there has never been so many tech revolutions setting up to boom over a five to ten year period as there are right now. Each of the following six Tech Revolutions are likely to generate hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue up and down the economy, from supply and demand and components and software and services and maintenance and security and so on. I put a couple of tickers to watch for each sector and in coming weeks, I'll feature each of the following Tech Revolutions and the ways to invest in them in much more detail. Artificial Intelligence - IBM IBM, Nvidia NVDA, Microsoft MSFT, Facebook FB, Google GOOGL. Chatbots - Facebook, Microsoft, TenCent. Virtual Reality - Facebook, Sony SNE, Nvidia, Google. Wearables - GoPro GPRO, Sony, Ambarella AMBA, Google, Nuance NUAN. Drones - Aero AVAV, Amazon AMZN, GoPro, Ambarella. Robotics - Intuitive Surgical ISRG, iRobot IRBT, Mazor Robotics MZOR, Honda HMC. I don't suggest going out and blindly buying all the stocks in each of these Tech Revolutions. We've got to do homework on each company's strategies, technological roadmaps, defensive moats, critical mass, platform creations and so on. I work on this stuff all day every day and here's what I can tell you: There's never been a better time to be a Revolution Investor in the history of the planet than right here, right now.