Showing posts with label Thechnology. Show all posts

Tuesday 23 September 2014

PlayStation TV Coming to U.S. in October at $99 Price

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Available in Japan since last year, the PlayStation TV will go on sale in the U.S. this Oct. 14 for $99.99, Sony announced. The set-top box is due to launch in Europe one month later with a price tag of €99.99.

When connected to a television, PlayStation TV provides access to a selection of PS Vita, PSP, and PS One games, in addition to allowing users to access saved movies, TV shows, and music like any other set-top box.

The system also allows PlayStation 3 and 4 players to pick up a saved game on a different screen thanks to its Remote Play feature.

Aside from the around 700 games available through the service (including God of War, Tomb Raider, and Tekken), three PS Vita games will be provided for free with purchase (Worms Revolution Extreme, Velocity Ultra and OlliOlli).

PlayStation TV has an internal storage capacity of 1 GB (expandable via memory card) and is compatible with the DualShock 3 and DualShock 4 controllers.

In the US, the device will be available in a bundle including a DualShock 3 controller, an 8 GB memory card and The Lego Movie Videogame for $139.99. No bundled offers have been announced so far for the European market.

AFP

Bandits Steal Berlin IPhone Cash, Showing Payment Hurdle

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Bloomberg - If bandits rob banks because that’s where the money is, then it makes sense to hold up an Apple Store in Germany on the day after a new iPhone is released -- because that’s where the cash is.

Late Saturday afternoon, with would-be iPhone buyers still queuing in front of Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s marble-and-glass emporium on Berlin’s Kurfuerstendamm, three masked gunmen stormed a security company’s van that was hauling away the pile of euros the store had taken in over the weekend.

One reason the outlet had so much cash on hand: Germans are famously behind much of the developed world in credit- and debit-card payments, with cash still used in more than half of money spent in stores. The iPhone 6, released Sept. 19, presents an opportunity for Germans to move toward a cashless future.

Whereas Americans, Scandinavians, French and Italians can buy a cup of coffee or a pack of gum with a card, it’s rare for Germans to use plastic for such payments, and it can be hard to find a cafe or restaurant in Berlin, Munich or Frankfurt that will accept credit cards.

Just 15 percent of retail payments in Germany are made by credit or debit card, the lowest among seven countries studied by the European Central Bank in a paper released in June. In the U.S., by contrast, 45 percent of payments are made by card.

While it’s easy to use plastic at Apple’s Berlin store, it’s not uncommon to see customers pay cash for iPhones or computers costing hundreds of euros. A staff member who answered the phone at the shop declined to make a manager available to comment. Police declined to say whether they had any leads on the identity of the thieves. Apple declined to comment on matters of security at its Berlin store.

Apple Pay

A key feature of the iPhone 6 is something called Apple Pay. The service, which the company expects to introduce in the U.S. in October, will let customers shop in stores and online by tapping their finger on the phone’s fingerprint scanner rather than paying cash or swiping a card. Apple hasn’t given details about plans for Apple Pay outside its home market.

“Apple Pay has the critical mass to accelerate the transition toward digital payments,” Barclays Bank Plc analysts said in a note released Sept. 19.

Germans have already started moving -- slowly -- away from cash. People in the country used cash for 53 percent of the money they spent in stores in 2011, down from 58 percent three years earlier, according to the most recent data from the country’s central bank, the Bundesbank.

That change, though, won’t accelerate unless German worries about privacy and data security are addressed, said Richard Crone, founder of Crone Consulting LLC, a mobile payments researcher in San Francisco.

Security Breaches

And those concerns give a system like Cupertino, California-based Apple’s an advantage, Crone said. The technology doesn’t reveal a customer’s identity or payment information to the vendor, which means shoppers face less risk from security breaches such as the recent theft of millions of credit card numbers from retailers such as Target Corp. (TGT) and Home Depot Inc. (HD)

“You cannot get rid of this risk until you get rid of the card,” and Apple’s system does just that, Crone said.

Google has its own cash replacement, software called Google Wallet, and Vodafone Group Plc (VOD), Telefonica SA (TEF), Royal KPN NV (KPN) and Deutsche Telekom AG are trying to gain traction for similar services. While the competition will hasten the introduction of new ideas into the market, it could slow adoption by consumers because it could sow confusion in the market.

“There are a lot of conflicting technologies out there,” said Thad Peterson, a consultant at Aite Group, a research firm in Boston. “Companies and customers have been on the fence because there has been no technological standard in mobile payments.”

Brazen Heist

The heist was brazen. The Apple store, a former movie palace built a century ago, was flooded with people checking out the new phones and shoppers thronged the busy boulevard outside. The bandits rushed the cash transporter and carried off a chunk of the day’s earnings. The robbers jumped in a Citroen sedan and sped off. A short time later, police say they found the burning remnants of the getaway car in a wooded area about two miles from the store.

Though authorities and Apple haven’t said how much the thieves got away with or whether the money was insured, the hold-up won’t do much damage to Apple, which reported cash and investments of $164.5 billion at the end of last quarter.

Apparently, the bad guys didn’t nab any of the new phones while making their getaway.

Microsoft Xbox One set to launch in China on September 29

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(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp has set Sept. 29 as the new launch date for its Xbox One game console in China, the U.S. software giant said on Tuesday, in the first launch since a 14-year ban on sales of foreign games consoles was lifted this year.
The world's biggest software company gave no reason for the delay in the launch which was originally scheduled for Sept. 23.
The delay is the latest in a series of setbacks for Microsoft in China, where it is under investigation for suspected anti-trust violations related to the Windows operating system and Microsoft Office.
"We take great care to ensure that we meet or exceed regulatory standards," said Microsoft in an e-mail to Reuters in response to the delayed console launch.
The Xbox One console will cost 3,699 yuan ($602.76) without the Kinect motion detection system and 4,299 yuan ($700.53) with Kinect, Microsoft said.
China is the world's third-biggest gaming market where revenues grew by more than a third from 2012 to nearly $14 billion last year.
Console games must also get approval from Shanghai's local culture department, which will ensure they do not harm China's national unity, territorial integrity or reputation - or promote racial hatred, obscenity, gambling, violence or drugs. This could stop some of video games' biggest franchises, such as Grand Theft Auto and Call of Duty, from being published in China.
"After receiving government approval for the first wave of games, we've decided to launch with digital copies of the first 10 games now and will continue our work to bring more blockbuster games and a broad offering of entertainment and app experiences to the platform in the months to come," Enwei Xie, Microsoft's general manager for Xbox China, said in a press release.
In May, Sony Corp) said it would set up a joint venture with Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group to bring the PlayStation games console to China.

Microsoft makes the Xbox One console with Chinese internet TV set-top box maker BesTV New Media Co Ltd.

China regulator says iPhone 6 in final review stages: Tencent

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(Reuters) - Apple Inc's iPhone 6 is in the final stages of review for approval, with results due shortly, a top Chinese government regulator said in an interview published on Tuesday by Tencent.
The status of the iPhone 6 in China has been a mystery since Apple unveiled the device this month without releasing a launch date for the world's largest smartphone market.
The delay has led to widespread speculation the iPhone has run into difficulty securing regulatory approval from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), with some reports suggesting the launch could be delayed until 2015.
"The iPhone 6 has entered the final stage of the approval process, now it's just a matter of time," MIIT chief Miao Wei told Tencent in an exclusive interview in Beijing. "Netizens, please wait patiently."
Miao declined to offer a time frame for completion of the review, saying only that he expected a result "very soon".

The ministry could not be immediately reached for comment Tuesday.

How to Ditch Android and Join the Apple Side (and Bring Your Data with You)

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Now that Apple’s got its bigger, better iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, we suspect oodles of big-screen Android aficionados may defect to iOS. (Apparently Apple thinks so, too). But while switching phones is one type of headache, switching phones and operating systems can induce migraine-level pains if you’re not properly prepared.
But you will be prepared. From your can’t-miss calendar events to your favorite apps, here’s how to make sure your most important mobile needs make the transition from Android to iOS as smoothly as possible.
Mail, Calendar, and ContactsIf you keep your life synced with Google’s cloud-based ecosystem, transferring from Android to iOS is relatively easy. You’ll need to create an Apple ID when you first begin your iOS journey (if you don’t already have an iTunes account), but you can add your Google account once you’ve finished your phone’s initial setup.
To do this, go to Settings → Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then tap Add Account. There you can add your Google account (or any other email account you’d like synced on the device). Once added, you can choose to sync Mail, Contacts, Calendars, and Notes.
If you’ve kept your contacts stored locally on your Android phone, you’ll first need to export your contacts to that device’s SD card, connect it to your computer and download the resulting .vcf file, and then log into your Google account. Click where it says Gmail in the upper left to go to Contacts, then click the More tab and selectImport. Now, when you add your Google account to your iPhone, your contacts will come along, too.
Keyboards
Since iOS 8 now supports third-party keyboards, the chances you’ll be able to continue using a near-identical version of your keyboard are extremely high. Lucky you!
Adding a third party keyboard to your system is pretty simple. Download the keyboard app from the App Store, and then go toSettings → General → Keyboards → Add New Keyboard. Navigate to the section for third-party keyboards, and you’ll see all the keyboard apps you’ve downloaded. Select the one you want to use, give it permission to be used systemwide, and you’re ready to go.
Popular keyboards like SwiftKeySwypeFleksy, and TouchPal should now all be available for iOS 8.
WidgetsWhile you won’t have the same sort of home screen widgets as on an Android handset, iOS 8 does allow widgets in its Today view in the Notification Center. You access with a swipe down from the top of the screen and, as its name suggests, this is where you’ll also find a list of recent, actionable notifications you’ve received.
As for widgets, the latest version of the Yahoo Weather app includes one that acts like a miniature version of the full-blown app, with a location-specific Flickr photo annotated with current and future temperature conditions. Calendar apps like Readdle’s Calendars 5also offer Notification Center widgets for a better glanceable version of your daily schedule than Apple’s Calendar provides.
Dropbox, Evernote, and OpenTable are some of the other titles that offer such widgets. 9to5Mac has a comprehensive alphabetical list of apps that currently enable Notification Center widgets, but more will surely be on the way.
Your app collection
Unfortunately, there’s no one- or two-step way to get all your favorites from Android onto your iOS device. You’ll need to go through and manually restock your homescreen with the apps you use on the regular.
But this annoyance is actually an opportunity in disguise. Now is the time to take an inventory of your app collection. Make a list of your actual favorites, the ones you use daily, and the ones you can’t imagine living without. Ditch the rest. Congratulations; your app collection just got a thorough fall cleaning.
With the exception of only a handful of titles (mostly games), nearly all of your Android favorites should also be on iOS. If you already shelled out big money for an Android version of an app, it could be worth dropping its customer service a line — it may be able to offer a discount code for your continued patronage, rather than risk you choosing a cheaper competing app. If the app is only $1, though, don’t be stingy; show the dev some love.

Photos, music, PDFs, and other mediaOne of the things I love about getting a new handset is the chance to start fresh. But some folks like to keep their favorite photos, videos, and music on their device, always. No sweat. If that’s you, you’ll want to first download them onto your computer (connect your Android device and then sync using Outlook or Exchange) and transfer them onto your iPhone via iTunes. To do this, connect your iPhone via USB or over WiFi and launch iTunes, click Sync with Phone, and then choose the media you want on your new phone (you can select from books, movies and TV shows, notes, photos, audio content, and more).

If you’re transferring PDFs and ePub documents, you can still access them on iOS using iBooks to read them (or another PDF reader). If you’ve got Office documents, then Apple’s Pages, Numbers, and Keynote will let you read and edit them on the iPhone, or you can use Microsoft Office for iOS.
Your MP3 files, if you aren’t already an avid Spotify or Rdio user, will live in Apple’s Music app on iOS once they’ve been added to iTunes. And once your audio collection is sorted, if you want to buy more music on the go, you’ll be buying content on iTunes (same goes for movies or TV shows).
For anything stored in the cloud — for instance on Evernote, Google Drive, or Dropbox — you’re good to go. Just download the iOS versions of those apps, and you’ll be able to access your files once they’re synced.

Apple Plans to Phase Out Beats Music Brand

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Beats Music will eventually disappear as a brand, according to a new report. TechCrunch reports that Apple plans to eliminate the Beats Music streaming service, which it acquired in May, but doesn’t say when. The report is less clear on what Apple plans to do with streaming music. Once source tells TechCrunch that on-demand music could be integrated into iTunes; another source says Apple will make a “significant music announcement” in the first half of 2015.

Engineers from Beats Music have already been transferred to other divisions at Apple, including iTunes, according to the report. As TechCrunch notes, Beats Music CEO Ian Rogers was put in charge of Apple’s ad-supported iTunes Radio product in August and has been splitting his time between the services since then.

When Apple bought the Beats brand for $3 billion, Apple senior vice president Eddy Cue called Beats Music “ the first music subscription service done right .” Though it mostly mimicked existing services from Spotify, Rdio, and others, Beats Music tried to differentiate itself through hand-curated playlists and the involvement of music-industry titans like Dr. Dre and Trent Reznor. But after three months, it had only 250,000 subscribers, compared with  over 10 million  on Spotify. Still, Cue had positioned Beats as a key component of Apple’s music strategy, saying that the company wanted to offer on-demand listening along with ad-supported radio and digital downloads.
All of which suggests that while the Beats Music brand may be going away, on-demand streaming from Apple could easily take another form. If iTunes is remade as a kind of celestial jukebox that combines your MP3s and on-demand streaming into a single place, then the Beats Music brand going away might not be such a bad thing, after all.

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


YAHOO

Apple sells more than 10 million new iPhones in first three days

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(Reuters) - Apple Inc said it sold more than 10 million iPhones in the first weekend after its new models went on sale on Friday, underscoring strong demand for phones with larger displays.

Chief Executive Tim Cook said the company could have sold even more iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus models if supplies had been available.

Analysts had estimated first-weekend sales of up to 10 million iPhones, after Apple booked record pre-orders of 4 million on Sept. 12, the day pre-orders opened.

Apple's shares were little changed at $100.98 in afternoon trading on the Nasdaq on Monday.

The company's first-quarter revenue is likely to be 9 percent higher than Wall Street estimates, based on reported sales and projected demand for the new iPhones, Piper Jaffray & Co analyst Gene Munster wrote in a note.

Munster said he expected earnings per share to be 12 percent higher than estimates.

"Despite the supply chain constraints around the iPhone 6 Plus and tightness around certain models of the iPhone 6, we believe (Monday's) strong print demonstrates that Apple executed extremely well in the face of severe supply constraints," Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Brian White wrote in a note.

First-day pre-orders for the new phones, which went on sale in 10 countries, far surpassed the 2 million recorded for the iPhone 5 model two years ago.

"While our team managed the manufacturing ramp better than ever before, we could have sold many more iPhones with greater supply and we are working hard to fill orders as quickly as possible," Cook said in a statement.

Apple sold 9 million iPhone 5S and 5C models last year in 11 countries, including China, in the first weekend they were available.

Sales of the latest models in China, the world's largest smartphone market, have been delayed by regulatory issues.

Lured by the prospect of profit from smuggling the new iPhones into China, opportunists joined the scores of fans outside Apple stores to buy the devices.

Police in New Haven, Connecticut said fights broke out among customers believed to be rival groups of Chinese men and women who were apparently trying to buy as many iPhones as possible to resell them at a significant mark-up in China.

Three people were arrested, one of whom suffered a small cut to his forehead and was treated in hospital.

"Store managers have phoned several times to report fights and ill-behaved line waiters," the New Haven Police Department said in a statement.

Apple said last week that many U.S. customers would have to wait until next month for their new iPhones due to strong demand. The company routinely faces iPhone supply constraints, particularly in years that involve a re-design.

The new iPhones will be available in 20 more countries on Sept. 26, Apple said.

The company sold 5 million iPhone 5 handsets, 4 million iPhone 4S models and 1.7 million iPhone 4 units during the first weekend.

The shipment levels of iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are positive, given that the new models are not initially available in China, Stifel Nicolaus & Co analyst Aaron Rakers wrote in a note.

Rakers noted that the latest models would be available in 115 countries by the end of this year compared with 100 for iPhone 5S and 5C.

Monday 22 September 2014

LinkedIn Says China Needs Open Door for Internet Firms

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LinkedIn Corp. (LNKD) said China needs to create a more tolerant regulatory environment and give access to overseas companies in order to better develop its Internet industry.

“We hope an open-door policy can be maintained so that it’s favorable for foreign companies to come to China,” Derek Shen, LinkedIn’s China president, told the World Economic Forum conference in Tianjin, speaking in Mandarin.

LinkedIn started a Chinese-language professional networking site in February and is the biggest U.S. social-media company active in the nation. Internet regulators there block access to other U.S.-based social sites, including those of Facebook Inc. (FB), Google Inc. (GOOG)’s YouTube and Twitter Inc. (TWTR)

LinkedIn is “doing well” in China and had 5 million users there as of May, Shen said in an interview after his speech. He declined to say how the censorship policies mandated by China affect service users elsewhere.

When a LinkedIn user in China shares a post deemed to be in conflict with the government’s rules, the company blocks the content globally. The company said this month it is considering changing that policy. Shen declined to elaborate.

“We will focus on making sure users have the best experience,” Shen told Bloomberg News. “I can’t comment on censorship policies.”


Google selects HTC for upcoming Nexus tablet: WSJ

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(Reuters) - Google Inc has selected HTC Corp to make its upcoming 9-inch Nexus tablet, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Google had been mulling HTC as a potential Nexus tablet partner since last year and HTC engineers have been flying to the Googleplex in Mountain View in recent months to work on the project, the report said.

Google's decision to pick HTC reflects its long-term strategy of building a broad base of partners from device to device to prevent any one manufacturer from gaining a monopoly, the report said.

That may also be one of the reasons why Google chose HTC over bigger rivals Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, maker of the Nexus 10 tablet.

Google and HTC declined to comment on the report.

Israel approves Intel's $6 billion investment in chip plant

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(Reuters) - Israel's finance and economy ministries on Monday approved a plan by Intel Corp to invest $6 billion in the upgrade of its chip manufacturing plant, in what would be the largest single investment by a foreign company in the country.

Intel will receive a government grant of $300 million over five years and will be eligible to pay a corporate tax rate of only 5 percent for a 10-year period, the ministries said.

The U.S. chip giant plans to hire close to 1,000 more workers at the plant in the southern town of Kiryat Gat by 2023, in addition to the 2,500 that already work there.

"Intel's investment is a strategic asset for Israel's industry," Finance Minister Yair Lapid said in a statement. "This is the biggest investment by a foreign company ever in Israel and is further proof that Israel is at the forefront of technology and innovation."

Intel submitted the investment plan in May and it is widely believed to be aimed at shifting to new 10 nanometer technology.

The finance ministry said the plant would be the most advanced chip facility in the world.

A company spokesman declined to comment. Intel had said January that it would decide on the location of a 10 nanometer plant this year. Israel was one of a number of countries competing to host the new plant.

Intel Israel's exports, mainly from its Fab 28 plant in Kiryat Gat, amounted to $3.8 billion in 2013, down from $4.6 billion the year before.

In its 40 years in Israel, Intel has invested $10.8 billion in plants and development centers and received $1.5 billion in grants. It employs nearly 10,000 people in the Jewish state.

Alibaba IPO ranks as world's biggest after additional shares sold

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(Reuters) - Alibaba's initial public offering now ranks as the world's biggest at $25 billion, netting underwriters of the sale a more than $300 million windfall after the e-commerce giant and some shareholders parted with additional shares.

The fees are equivalent to 1.2 percent of the total deal, with Alibaba paying $121.8 million in commissions. Selling shareholders are set to pay another $178.6 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday.

Overwhelming demand saw the IPO initially raise $21.8 billion, and then sent Alibaba Group Holding Ltd's stock surging 38 percent in its debut on Friday. That prompted underwriters to exercise an option to sell an additional 48 million shares, a source with direct knowledge of the deal said.

That means the IPO has surpassed a previous global record set by Agricultural Bank of China Ltd in 2010, when the lender raised $22.1 billion.

According to its prospectus, Alibaba had agreed to sell 26.1 million additional shares under the option, and Yahoo Inc an additional 18.3 million, netting the two companies an extra $1.8 billion and $1.2 billion respectively.

Alibaba's Jack Ma had agreed under the same option to sell an extra 2.7 million shares and company co-founder Joe Tsai agreed to 902,782 additional shares.

The source declined to be identified as the details of the additional sale have yet to be made official.

Alibaba declined to comment.

Citigroup Inc, Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Morgan Stanley acted as joint bookrunners of the IPO.

Rothschild was hired as Alibaba's independent financial advisor on the deal.

Sunday 21 September 2014

Peter Thiel Says Twitter ‘Horribly Mismanaged’

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Twitter Inc. (TWTR) is mismanaged, underperforming and there’s “probably a lot of pot-smoking going on there,” according to Peter Thiel, an early investor in Facebook Inc. (FB)

Replacing Chief Executive Officer Dick Costolo won’t change the culture, Thiel, a co-founder of PayPal Inc. and Palantir Technologies Inc., said on CNBC yesterday. Still, Twitter has potential and may succeed even though it’s dysfunctional, Thiel said.
“You’d have to fire everybody and start over,” Thiel said. “It feels like it’s vastly underperforming its potential. It’s a horribly mismanaged company -- probably a lot of pot-smoking going on there.”
Management at Twitter, which lets people share 140-character updates, has undergone several changes and the company has struggled to update its products amid internal bickering. Co-founders Evan Williams, Biz Stone and Jack Dorsey, who is Twitter’s chairman, are all running new startups. Costolo this year replaced the chief financial officer and heads of consumer product and engineering, and ousted Chief Operating Officer Ali Rowghani.
Jim Prosser, a spokesman for San Francisco-based Twitter, declined to comment on Thiel’s remarks. Bijan Sabet, an early investor in Twitter at Spark Capital, called Thiel’s comments “nasty, silly and wrong.”
Costolo, a former stand-up comedian, responded to Thiel’s reference to marijuana with a joke.
“Working my way through a giant bag of Doritos,” Costolo tweeted in an exchange yesterday with early Twitter employee Jason Goldman. “I’ll catch up with you later.”
PepsiCo Inc., whose Frito-Lay division sells Doritos, declined to comment.
The culture of the company was set by its founders and probably won’t change, Thiel said. Even if Twitter does overcome obstacles, it is unlikely to advance society, he said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Emily Chang, noting that Facebook probably won’t either.
“I think the 2,000 or so people who work at Twitter will be gainfully employed for many, many years to come,” Thiel said. “A company like Twitter will not be enough to take our civilization to the next level. A company like Facebook is not enough to take our civilization to the next level.”
Thiel may not disapprove of smoking pot. He donated $70,000 to a 2010 California marijuana legalization campaign

Bloomberg

Gold IPhones at $3,600 as China Delay Fuels Black Market

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  Bloomberg - Liu Min stands a few feet from anApple Inc. (AAPL) store in Beijing hawking something that can’t be bought inside: the new iPhone 6.
While the device debuted today in the U.S., Hong Kong, Japan andAustralia, there is no release date set for the world’s biggest smartphone market. That creates an opportunity for Liu, who promises two-day delivery of a 16-gigabyte iPhone 6 for 8,000yuan ($1,303) -- almost double the price on Apple’s Hong Kong website.
“It’s going to be a while before the new iPhone comes to China officially, so if you want it now, you have to pay up,” Liu said, pacing outside the Sanlitun district store selling screen protectors. “Give me a call if you want one.”
Liu, who wouldn’t discuss his supply chain, wasn’t alone. Four vendors nearby offered the 128-gigabyte iPhone 6 for delivery on Sept. 20 at the equivalent of about $2,441, compared with the Hong Kong price of about $927.
Related:
Big-Screen IPhones Draw Long Lines at Europe, U.S. Stores
iPhone's 'Fastest Rollout Ever'? Depends on How You Measure It
Tim Cook Interview: Making the Watch, Remaking Apple
Consumers typically waited at least three months for Apple to start selling new iPhones in China, triggering a flood of devices into the country’s black market. As many as 5 million may be smuggled into China before the new models are officially available, said Neil Shah, Mumbai-based research director for devices at Counterpoint Research.
 ‘Sure Bet’
The promise of lucrative returns also has many of Hong Kong’s finance professionals trying to capitalize on one of the biggest arbitrage opportunities in China.
“This is a sure bet to make money,” said Ronald Wan, the chief China adviser at Asian Capital Holdings Ltd. in Hong Kong. “From a 50 percent to 150 percent markup, it’s better than the stock market.”
The benchmark Hang Seng Index, the world’s fourth-largest stock market, has gained 4.3 percent this year.
The Apple delay stems from the fact that the new iPhones have cleared just two of three regulatory steps, the official Xinhua News Agency reported yesterday. The devices still need network access licenses from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Xinhua said.
Carolyn Wu, a Beijing-based spokeswoman for Apple, declined to comment on when the new models will be available in China, what impact smuggling will have on the market or on the status of the government applications.
Wu repeated previous statements that the iPhone 6 “will get here as soon as possible.”
China Mobile Ltd. (941), the world’s largest carrier by users, doesn’t know when the iPhone 6 models will be available in the market, Chairman Xi Guohua said this week.
Breaking Laws
Outside the Apple Store in Hong Kong’s IFC mall, two young women were reselling the new phones for double the price. One foreigner held up a sign saying, “Need an iPhone 6.”
Su Ling, 32, who works in the wealth-management unit at a European lender in Hong Kong, bought two devices through Apple’s small-business website for about HK$6,400 ($826) each and anticipates selling them for about HK$10,000.
“Everyone in my office who could get on the site bought a pair,” Su said. “I plan to go to Shenzhen to sell on the streets” if custom checks entering the border city aren’t too strict, he said, declining to name his employer because he’s not authorized to speak to media.
The phones are multiband devices that will work anywhere. Yet anyone selling a device on China’s black market breaks at least two laws -- the requirements to pay hefty import duties and to only use mobile phones sanctioned for sale by the government.
Trailing Xiaomi
Last year was the first time Apple’s phones were available in China on the same day as the global debut. Previously, the typical three-month lag helped fuel smuggling of about 20 million iPhones into China annually, said Jun Zhang, San Francisco-based analyst and head of China equities research at Rosenblatt Securities Inc.
Apple got $5.9 billion of sales in the fourth quarter from the Greater China region, including Taiwan and Hong Kong. That is about 16 percent of the company’s total. The iPhone is well behind market leaders Xiaomi Corp. andSamsung Electronics Co. (005930), ranking sixth in China with about 6 percent market share, according to International Data Corp.
“Chinese consumers will still find ways to get their hands on the device, regardless of the delay,” said Sandy Shen, a Shanghai-based analyst with Gartner Inc. “I think the lag may even fuel the enthusiasm for the device.”
‘Joining Fun’
Zhang Limin, an investor adviser at China Securities Co. in the northeastern city of Harbin, said he’s willing to pay as much as 20,000 yuan for a device. The 30-year-old currently uses an iPhone 5 and a second handset from Xiaomi.
It’s not just in mainland China where people are looking to profit from the delay. At the computer-store complex in Hong Kong’s Wan Chai district, vendors offer the gold iPhone 6 Plus for between HK$18,000 and HK$28,000.
“Many, many people are asking -- from mainland, from Hong Kong,” said Chen Xiaoming, a 29-year-old worker at the “Well Go Telecom” store.
In the Mong Kok district, a popular shopping destination for tourists, an electronics store offered to buy an iPhone 6 for at least HK$10,000 and an iPhone 6 Plus for HK$12,000.
“It’s not just organized resellers trying to benefit from this iPhone demand in China, but even a lot of individuals are hoping to make a buck in this reselling business,” said Kiranjeet Kaur, a Singapore-based analyst with IDC.
One of them is Zhong Chenyan, a 28-year-old working in Hong Kong’s marketing industry. She bought two gold, 128-gigabyte devices online and plans to sell one to an acquaintance for the equivalent of $1,546. She plans to resell the other for about $1,950.
“Many people around me are doing this, and I wanted to join the fun,” Zhong said. “If I could get the phone and sell it, great.”

SoftBank estimates $4.6 billion gain from Alibaba listing

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(Reuters) - Japan's SoftBank Corp said it expected a gain of about 500 billion yen ($4.6 billion) from Alibaba Group Holding's share listing in New York, where the Chinese e-commerce leader surged 38 percent on its first day of trade.

SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son also told CNBC that he would want to own more of Alibaba, although he reiterated that the Japanese mobile carrier and Internet media company was happy with the current 32 percent stake, which made it the Chinese company's biggest shareholder.

Asked if he would like more of Alibaba, Son told CNBC on Friday: "Of course."

Pressed on the likelihood of buying more shares, Son added: "Anything is possible but we are happy the way it is."

He said SoftBank considered Alibaba a core holding and he was upbeat about the Chinese company's future.

"My point of view is that this is the true beginning of Alibaba," he said. "I'm very, very optimistic."

SoftBank said in a statement on Saturday that it would book the estimated 500 billion yen gain in the half-year to end-September and would announce a precise figure at a later time. The gain was recorded to reflect Alibaba's increased asset value with the issuance of new shares and the conversion of preference shares to common stock in conjunction with the listing.

The Chinese e-commerce leader's shares surged in their Friday debut on the New York Stock Exchange as investors jumped at what is likely to rank as the largest IPO in history, betting on Chinese growth and a company that accounts for 80 percent of that country's online sales.

(Reporting by Yuka Obayashi, Teppei Kasai and Yoshiyasu Shida; Writing by Edmund Klamann; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

Microsoft delays launch of its Xbox One console in China

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 Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) has delayed the launch of its Xbox One game console in China, which had been set for release on Tuesday, but the world's biggest software company said it would be released by the end of the year.

Microsoft did not give a reason for the delay in a statement on Sunday.

The delay is the latest in a series of setbacks for Microsoft in China, where it is under investigation for suspected anti-trust violations related to the Windows operating system and Microsoft Office.

The Chinese government lifted a 2000 ban on gaming consoles earlier this year. Microsoft had reached a deal with Chinese internet TV set-top box maker BesTV New Media Co Ltd (600637.SS) to form a joint venture to manufacture the consoles in Shanghai's Free Trade Zone a year ago.

The Xbox One console will cost 3,699 yuan ($602.37) without the Kinect motion detection system and 4,299 yuan ($700) with Kinect, Microsoft said in July.

China is the world's third-biggest gaming market, where revenues grew by more than a third from 2012 to nearly $14 billion last year.

However, piracy and the dominance of PC and mobile gaming may leave little room for legitimate console and game sales.

In May, Sony Corp (6758.T) said it would set up a joint venture with Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group (600832.SS) to bring the PlayStation games console to China.

WITH ALIBABA'S BIG DEBUT, 10 THINGS TO KNOW

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 (AP) — China's e-commerce giant Alibaba began trading its shares Friday on the New York Stock Exchange. Here are ten things to know about Alibaba, and why its initial public offering made history:
THE BIGGEST: Alibaba raised $21.8 billion in its debut, making it the biggest U.S.-listed IPO in history after the IPO of credit card processing company Visa in 2008. If Alibaba's investment banks were to exercise their option to sell an additional 48 million shares, it could make Alibaba's IPO the biggest in the world, beating out the $22 billion IPO of Agricultural Bank of China in 2010.
DON'T FORGET YAHOO: It may have been a big day for Alibaba and its founder Jack Ma, but Yahoo's investors are feeling pretty good after Alibaba's IPO. Yahoo was an early investor in Alibaba, paying $1 billion for a stake in the company in 2005. Yahoo likely made $8.3 billion to $9.5 billion in Alibaba's IPO, and will still own a 16 percent stake in the company worth $37.7 billion.
ALIBABA ECLIPISES SILICON VALLEY: Alibaba now has a market capitalization of roughly $219.8 billion, according to FactSet. That makes the company bigger than some of the U.S. technology industry's most successful names, such as Facebook, eBay, and even Amazon.com.
ALL IN ONE: Investors are interested in Alibaba because the company dominates many businesses in China that, here in the U.S., are run by individual companies. Alibaba owns the websites Tmall and Taobao, which are similar to Amazon.com and eBay, respectively. The company also earns money from transaction fees related to its various businesses through Alipay, which is like PayPal. That's just three of Alibaba's many subsidiaries.
BIG PROFITS: Unlike the U.S. e-commerce giant Amazon, Alibaba has been consistently profitable. The company had $8.5 billion in sales in its latest fiscal year ending in March, with net income of $3.8 billion. The year prior, Alibaba had $5.4 billion in sales and $1.4 billion in profits. In comparison, Amazon sold $74.4 billion in goods in 2013, but made only $274 million in profits that year. In 2012, Amazon reported a net loss of $39 million.
RISKS: If Alibaba does well for investors, it will be the exception to what has been the trend for Chinese companies. When Chinese companies have listed stocks on American markets, their shares have lost an average 1 percent a year for the next three years, compared with an average 7 percent annual gain for other U.S. IPOs, according to research by Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of Florida.
SECOND TIME AROUND: This isn't Alibaba's first time going public. Alibaba took its online shopping portal Alibaba.com public in 2007 in Hong Kong. Alibaba.com was a publicly traded company only for a few years. Alibaba took Alibaba.com private in 2012.
SOLID GOLD: Jack Ma, who started Alibaba in 1999 in his apartment in the Chinese city of Hangzhou, is now among the richest people in the world. Ma's ownership in the company is worth roughly $18.2 billion, based on Alibaba's closing share price Friday. That doesn't include the shares he sold in the IPO, which are worth another $867 million, and his other investments. Bloomberg put his entire net worth at $21.9 billion, making him the 34th richest person in the world.
BIG WIN FOR NYSE: Alibaba chose to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange, making it the second A-list technology company to go public on the Big Board in less than a year. The NYSE handled Twitter's IPO last year. NYSE's competitor, the Nasdaq Stock Market, has struggled to win the business of big tech companies since Facebook's IPO in 2012, which was plagued with technical problems.
LIFE IS LIKE A BOX OF...: Jack Ma biggest hero is the fictional character Forrest Gump. "I really like that guy," Ma said, in an interview with business channel CNBC on Friday. "Every time I'm frustrated, I watch the movie. (The movie tells) me that no matter whatever changed, you are you."

Facebook's Oculus unveils new virtual reality prototype device

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(Reuters) - Facebook Inc's Oculus VR unit announced an upgraded prototype of its virtual reality headset that has higher resolution and built-in audio, but the company said it is not ready to sell a device to consumers.
The new Crescent Bay device also is lighter than the most recent prototype of the Oculus Rift headset the company has made available to developers, Chief Executive Brendan Iribe said on Saturday at an Oculus developers conference in Hollywood.
"This is not the consumer product," Iribe said. But he added that "it is much, much closer."
Facebook, the world's largest social network, acquired two-year-old Oculus in July for $2 billion, making a bet that the untested technology will emerge as a new social and communications platform.

The Oculus Rift goggles create a 360-degree view that immerses players in fantasy settings. Users mount the device on their heads with a strap.

Tuesday 16 September 2014

Alibaba options to be listed on ISE on Sept. 29 pending IPO

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(Reuters) - Alibaba Group's options will be listed on International Securities Exchange Holdings' options exchanges on Sept. 29 pending the company's public sale of shares this week, ISE said on Tuesday.
The Chinese e-commerce company is expected to sell shares to the public later in the week. International Securities Exchange Holdings operates two options exchanges, ISE and ISE Gemini, which cleared about 14 percent of equity and index options contracts in August.
On Monday, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd raised the price range on its initial public offering to $66 to $68, reflecting strong demand from investors for the year's most anticipated debut and potentially the world's largest-ever IPO.
Contract specifications for Alibaba options will be determined when the new listing is certified by OCC, formerly the Options Clearing Corporation, prior to trading, ISE said in a statement.
Typically, the other U.S. options exchanges would also offer these options at the same time as long as certain thresholds are met. A spokeswoman for CBOE Holdings Inc said on Tuesday that they will be listing Alibaba options but did not currently have a date when the options would be listed on the Chicago Board Options Exchange.
CBOE owns the Chicago Board Options Exchange, the largest U.S. stock options market.

A spokesperson for BATS Options exchange, a division of BATS Global Markets, could not be immediately reached for a response on when they plan to list Alibaba options.