Thursday, February 2, 2017

Facebook's strong quarter and video values. It's The Daily Crunch.

THE DAILY CRUNCH
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 2017 By Darrell Etherington

Facebook had a good quarter, and Mark Zuckerberg is obsessed with video. That and more in The Daily Crunch for February 2, 2017. Also I saw my shadow this morning so technological winter will last for six more weeks or however that works.

1. Facebook beats, scores big

Facebook is doing well, growing its monthly active users to even more absurd highs, and also growing its advertising revenue. The company's daily active user growth seems to be keeping up with last year, too, which is impressive when you're already looking at over a billion.

ARPU is growing, too, with North America propping up the rest of the world on this metric. You're worth about $20 per month to FB if you live in either the U.S. or Canada, it turns out.

2. Facebook will look to become a YouTube killer

"Video" was the word of the day for the earnings call, where Zuckerberg was really eager about the word and the actual media content on his platform. It sounds like they're more eager to get user-generated content than originals like Netflix and Amazon offer, but I still wouldn't discount them creating their own high-quality media to attract more viewers.

3. Instagram going multi-photo

Another Facebook property is doing some interesting things – Instagram is showing signs it could let users add multiple images to a single post in the future, which is great news if you're looking at all those cool galleries in Instagram ads and wanting that for yourself. Some critics say Instagram is overcomplicating their product, but that's just old people being afraid of change and shortsighted, and the numbers definitely don't back that up.

4. Oculus must pay ZeniMax $500 million after losing lawsuit

Oculus has to pay ZeniMax $500 million after losing a lawsuit, but it's not as bad as that might seem to a normal human. The amount is actually not that much for Facebook, and did not impact their share price so stockholders weren't bothered. Plus they don't have to admit they stole anything as a result of the decision, and both Palmer Luckey and Brendan Iribe are on the hook for $200 million of that amount in total. In other words, FB got off really light here, and this probably will have no impact on the ultimate success or failure of Oculus.

5. This bat bot is horrifyingly cool

Soft robots are almost invariably scary as heck, while also being very cool. This Bat Bot from the California Institute of Technology in partnership with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign fits that mould.

6. Slack goes Grid

Slack has launched Enterprise Grid, an enterprise version of its platform that will make it a lot easier to get into organization that require increased security and governance options. This is a huge move, as I personally know of some very large organizations who have looked at Slack longingly but couldn't do it without a managed version.

7. Sheryl Sandberg takes heat for not opposing Trump

Facebook's COO Sheryl Sandberg sat down with Recode's Kara Swisher, who grilled her on her silence on the Women's March and her seeming ambivalence about Trump. Based on social media reaction I saw, a lot of prominent feminist tech writers weren't thrilled with her responses.

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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Apple off to a great start in 2017. It's The Daily Crunch.

THE DAILY CRUNCH
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1 2017 By Darrell Etherington

Apple had a very strong quarter, Sandberg sounds off, Twitter celebrates Black History Month and more in The Daily Crunch for February 1, 2017. And Facebook wants to help you find more friends, but don't we have enough already?

1. Apple's quarterly earnings impress

Apple enjoyed very strong quarterly earnings, which bested most analyst expectations, with a modest return to iPhone sales growth that helped buoy results overall. The services side of the business also helped out considerably.

App Store enjoyed its strongest holiday quarter ever, which is surprising given a lot of observer and analyst sentiment regarding general consumer disinterest in downloading new apps. Big app makers are likely the ones to benefit most from this growth, but it's still a promising sign for the future of Apple's digital software marketplace.

2. Sheryl Sandberg joins the chorus of tech execs against Trump's immigration order

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg shared a post expressing her concern over the impact Trump's executive order on refugees will have on women. She's a little late to the party, but she did come out pretty strong against the move, noting that this is "not how it should be in America."

3. Twitter's Blackbirds employee group launches a bot for Black History Month

Twitter has a new bot launching for Black History Month, which starts today. The bot is the product of Twitter's Blackbirds employee resource group, and bears the group's name. If Twitter users DM the bot, it'll provide you one of four possible responses: a fact related to something that happened on this date in black history, a community event going on right now in major U.S. cities, or a tip on self-care or noteworthy moments from around the user community.

4. Facebook wants you to discover people now, too

Facebook wants to start helping you make new friends, rather than just connecting with existing ones. A new test feature on mobile called "Discover People" will encourage people to introduce themselves to others, and offer up potential connections via networks like city, events, and employers. It's kind of like the user suggestion thing but maybe a tad less easy to ignore.

5. Snapchat's hoping to expand the appeal of its AR filters

Snapchat has done well popularizing augmented reality through use of its facial filters, which can change a lot and analyze live images from your cameras to modify your visage. It's not looking to do the same advanced image processing with landscapes, so it can add objects and other things that aren't really there on the fly. Sounds cool. Also sounds potentially lucrative, for advertisers.

6. GoPro takes a second crack at the skies

GoPro's Karma was a significant attempt to increase its product range with a drone, a first for the company. But it fumbled the launch, which resulted in a recall and a months-long delay coming to market while the company addressed its battery bungling issues. Now it's back, but it'll have a much higher hill to climb this time around, and I don't love tis chances.

7. GTA publisher looks to social games

Take-Two a major games publisher whose titles include Grand Theft Auto, Civilization, BioShock and more is looking to expand into social mobile games, with an acquisition of a Zynga-like European studio called Social Point. There's money in making bad games with addictive hooks and plenty of in-app purchases, apparently.

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