Category: china | 中國 | 중국 | 中華

Ni hao – this category features any blog posts that relate to the People’s Republic of China, the Chinese communist party, Chinese citizens, consumer behaviour, business, and Chinese business abroad.

It is likely the post will also in other categories too.  For example a post about Tong Ren Tang might end up in the business section as well. Inevitably everything is inherently political in nature. At the moment, I don’t take suggestions for subject areas or comments on content for this category, it just isn’t worth the hassle.

Why have posts on China? I have been involved in projects there and had Chinese clients. China has some interesting things happening in art, advertising, architecture, design and manufacturing. I have managed to experience some great and not so great aspects of the country and its businesses.

Opinions have been managed by the omnipresent party and this has affected consumer behaviour. Lotte was boycotted and harassed out of the country. Toyota and Honda cars occasionally go through damage by consumer action during particularly high tensions with Japan.

I put stuff here to allow readers to make up their own  minds about the PRC. The size of the place makes things complicated and the only constants are change, death, taxes and the party. Things get even more complicated on the global stage.

The unique nature of the Chinese internet and sheltered business sectors means that interesting Galapagos syndrome type things happen.

I have separate sections for Taiwan and Hong Kong, for posts that are specific to them.

  • Beme & more news

    Beme

    CNN Brings In the Social App Beme to Cultivate a Millennial Audience – The New York Times – major news site suffering from lack of consumer trust (election coverage, fake news environment etc) buys YouTube V-logger to get some baes – and people wonder why the news media appears broken. Beme was founded by Casey Neistat was one of the first generation of YouTube bloggers. Beme rolled out a mobile app to syndicate their content

    Business

    The taxi unicorn’s new clothes | FT Alphaville – is sadly symptomatic of the emperor’s new clothes groupthink dominating the sector. Though it does explain the sector’s obsession with popularising the idea that public transport can be done away with. (Less investment in public transport will lead to fewer competitively priced alternatives, empowering the Uber monopoly in the long run)

    The Truth About Uber’s Otto Deal — The Information – hedged against the Otto founders, Sir Martin Sorrell could learn something ;-)

    Economics

    The Eurodollar Market: It All Starts Here | Zero Hedge – this is what keeps the UK afloat

    Brexit negotiators identify UK’s aces in the hole | FT – interesting read, ultimately the UK doesn’t have leverage across all the other 27 countries on the same things so could bounce out with nothing resolved

    Ideas

    ‘Millennials’ is a useless term | Jed Hallam | Pulse | LinkedIn – interesting that this had to be written. Whatever happened to tribes? More related content here.

    This Is What Happens When Millions Of People Suddenly Get The Internet – BuzzFeed News – Facebook’s influence in Myanmar is hard to quantify, but its domination is so complete that people in Myanmar use “internet” and “Facebook” interchangeably. According to Amara Digital, a Yangon-based marketing agency, Facebook has doubled its local base in the last year to 9.7 million monthly users. That number is likely to spike again, after Facebook launched its Free Basics program, a free, streamlined version of Facebook and a handful of other sites.

    Innovation

    Apple’s China R&D effort could fail to move the needle | FT – I still think that Apple needs the lab there because of the unique Chinese internet eco-system and the hardware design excellence in China

    Luxury

    No Price Like Home: Big Spenders Reappear in China — The Fashion Law – sales picking up in Mainland China

    Porsche Macan owners in China vent their anger at copycat maker – The owners are being asked whether the vehicles are genuine German cars or just Zotye SR9s with a Porsche badge stuck on the front hood.

    Media

    Creative Hub – Facebook – great ad examples

    Apple expert panel on shift from a hit-driven to services business – Business Insider – “I’ll play both sides of it for you, Steve. On the one hand, they haven’t had innovation for a long time and it looks really bleak and it’s been six years [if you measure by the iPad, which was introduced in 2010]. On the other hand, if after eight years they do something as big as the iPhone or the iPad or the iPod, then we’ll forget about, we’ll forget about those doubts.”

    Facebook To Target Streaming Viewers By Linking User Profiles With IP Addresses | IPG Media Lab – big potential targeting opportunities

    WeChat censorship offers a blueprint for Facebook, but it still shouldn’t enter China | Techinasia – I think Facebook wouldn’t be able to cope with the competition

    Online

    Facebook has cut off Prisma’s Live Video access | TechCrunch – Facebook doing vintage Microsoft

    Do China’s Celebrities or Influencers Have More Power? | L2 – traditional celebrities still win out

    An update on Google’s feature-phone crawling & indexing | Google Webmaster Blog – this is big news for the mobile web and will encourage feature phone services to fall back on SMS

    Security

    Infineon joins Chinese IoT security push | Electronics EETimes – to develop security technologies for smart home appliances that are manufactured and used in China

    ‘Tesco Bank’s major vulnerability is its ownership by Tesco,’ claims ex-employee • The Register – You’re probably only as secure as your least secure system

    Technology

    RISC-V Expands its Audience | EE Times – open source hardware design

    The Macintosh Endgame | MondayNote – interesting analysis, the problem is that iOS doesn’t have a user experience conducive to knowledge work like typing all day long

    Web of no web

    Fitbit To Buy Pebble — The Information – consolidation as the sector folds in on itself in the face of limited demands

    Watching the World Rot at Europe’s Largest Tech Conference – The Atlantic – the ennui of conferences in general

    Curiosity | Merck Group – interesting spin on the usual innovation corporate positioning

  • Hanjin Shipping + more news

    Hanjin Shipping

    Hanjin Shipping collapse may be the beginning of the end for profitable global trade | South China Morning Post – As capacity growth has continued at around 6 per cent a year, with the global container fleet four times larger today than it was in 2000, so it is estimated that we today have a 30 per cent surplus capacity on the world’s main shipping routes. The combination of extra capacity and stagnant cargo growth has led to a ruthless price war that has meant wonderfully cheap freight rates for exporters, but has stripped the shipping lines of all profit. – Hanjin Shipping is a South Korean integrated logistics and container transport company. Prior to liquidation, Hanjin Shipping was South Korea’s largest container line and one of the world’s top ten container carriers in terms of capacity. Hanjin Shipping transported approximately 3.7 million TEU containers a year. This service consisted of 24 container ships. Hanjin Shipping’s downfall was caused in part by overcapacity in the container ship industry.

    Business

    Are The Saudis About To Reveal The Best Kept Secret In Oil? | Zero Hedge – the reserve number could affect the way the world views and prices oil when disclosed

    Ctrip to buy UK’s Skyscanner for US$1.74b | Shanghai Daily – big move for Ctrip

    China

    China’s airports to ‘scrap boarding pass on domestic flights as early as next year’ | South China Morning Post – interesting, I wonder how this will affect foreigners on domestic flights?

    Economics

    With TPP Dead, China Officially Launches Its Own Pacific Free-Trade Deal | Zero Hedge – it will be interesting to see how the US reacts

    Mainland money distorting Hong Kong land prices, tycoon warns | FT.com – I would have said that has been the case since the handover, its also distorting land prices and property prices

    Autumn Statement shows cost of casual work ‘gig economy’ – BBC News – The UK’s “gig economy”, powered by self-employment and casual work, is starting to hit government revenues. Wednesday’s Autumn Statement for the first time showed how it is cutting into the government tax take. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimates that in 2020/21 it will cost the Treasury £3.5bn. Wild West Workplace – self employment in Britain’s gig economy by Frank Field and Andrew Forsey – (PDF) the case study on couriers is particularly insightful and gives you an idea of how screwed it all is

    WSJ City – UK Faces Lost Decade of Real Wage Growth – “One cannot stress enough how dreadful that is. We have certainly not seen a period remotely like it in the last 70 years.”

    EU ministers to discuss plan to charge Britons to visit Europe after Brexit | The Guardian – hahahahaha

    Innovation

    China first to record 1m patent filings in a year | FT – interesting debate over what this means. Is it really innovation or driven by state targets. In some areas such as telecommunications there is a definite patent land grab and research being done for competitive advantage

    Luxury

    Nordstrom Rack Pulls Hoodie with Images of Nanjing Massacre from Online Store – its like a bad Zoolander plot device made real

    Media

    疯狂希莉娅-电影-腾讯视频 (Mad Shelia) – a Chinese homage to Mad Max Thunder Road. Awkward product placements for apps and the fact that Thunder Road wasn’t allowed in China make this low budget work more divisive. Admittedly critics ignore the efforts by the likes of The Asylum in the US who are famous for their mock buster films

    Metrics FYI | Facebook Newsroom – Facebook is fixing bugs in measuring organic reach, more here

    Online

    The GeoCities Cage at Exodus Communications – amazing pictures – the cloud today wouldn’t look that different

    Telegram launches Telegraph, a long-form publishing platform | VentureBeat – new paste bin type blogging platform, though many have considered it as a challenge to Medium / new blogging platform

    Forbes: How Jared Kushner Won Trump The White House – it is interesting how the Democrats ‘unlearned’ lessons of the Obama campaign

    What the Hell Just Happened? – Medium – “I think that social media has more power than the money they spent, and I think maybe to a certain extent, I proved that.”

    Here’s How Facebook Actually Won Trump the Presidency | WIRED – according to President-elect Donald Trump’s digital director Brad Parscale, the social media giant was massively influential—not because it was tipping the scales with fake news, but because it helped generate the bulk of the campaign’s $250 million in online fundraising.

    Mark Zuckerberg – I want to share some thoughts on Facebook and the election – post is on Facebook

    Security 

    Three Mobile cyber hack: six million customers’ private information at risk after employee login used to access database  – it begs the question what is safe?

    DPC steps up Yahoo! hack investigation | RTE – bad news for Yahoo! from an EU perspective

    Secret Backdoor in Some U.S. Phones Sent Data to China, Analysts Say – NYTimes.com – Adups provides software to two of the largest cellphone manufacturers in the world, ZTE and Huawei 

    The software was written at the request of an unidentified Chinese manufacturer that wanted the ability to store call logs, text messages and other data, according to the Adups document. Adups said the Chinese company used the data for customer support

    Technology

    Apple dumps wireless router development, will exit the market – ExtremeTech – this is a shame as I have found Apple Routers exceptionally easy to set up and very reliable. Apple is being ruined by the tyranny of large numbers and design obsessions in many of the wrong places

    IBM new server produced by Wistron, adopted by Tencent | DigiTimes – interesting that it looks so different to servers from the likes of Facebook or Google and much more like an enterprise data centre

    MacBook Pro with Touch Bar review roundup – Business Insider – its a bit meh basically

    Web of no web

    Infineon places its bets on compound semiconductors, lidar, radar | Electronics EETimes – interesting that LIDAR is right up there

    A Brief History of GPS—from James Bond to Pokémon Go | Mother Jones – interesting article with some great links

    Wireless

    Apple Takes Record Profit Share with iPhone in Q3, Says Strategy Analytics – Tech Trader Daily – which shows how commoditised the smartphone market has become, especially when you think that Apple itself has declining margins on the iPhone 7

    Strategy Analytics: Apple Captures Record 91 Percent Share of Global Smartphone Profits in Q3 2016 – which gives you an idea of how thin the margins are. BBK – owners of Vivo and OPPO are killing Huawei by comparison. This implies that Huawei’s premium range isn’t doing as well as its budget Honor range when one takes into account the cost of preparing for production (tooling etc) as well as bill of materials

    Key takeaways from the American Academy of Pediatrics tablet and smartphone guidelines for children – iMedicalApps – little evidence of benefit, some evidence of harm – wow

  • Working class + populism

    What now for the working class?

    What now for the working class? Following president Trump’s election and the British plebiscite on European Union membership there has been lots of hand wringing about workers who traditionally participated in legacy industries being outside society.
    We won't pay for their crisis - Mancunian protest sticker
    Here is what we have to deal with:

    • The ‘traditional’ jobs aren’t coming back
    • Middle-class roles are already being disrupted
    • There is a declining  return on investment in further education, yet lifelong learning is a compulsory requirement
    • Globalisation is working at an aggregate level, but isn’t working at a local level
    • Western society has fractured. It will become more fractious once the realisation takes hold that:
    1. It can’t be resolved by simple measures, populists might listen – but can’t solve anything. Jobs are governed by a multiple factors that affect both cost and demand considerations
    2. It can’t be solved in a relatively short time frame. You can’t build the necessary eco-system and supporting industries to bring the jobs back; even if the economics made sense
    3. Governments don’t have their hands on the levers of control, the best governments can do is actively manage decline. Technological disruption puts the levers of control with a smaller group of people
    4. There is a lack of willingness by those with the money and the power to solve it – primarily due to the pressures that drive their behaviour
    5. Existing social welfare safety nets aren’t sustainable

    The realisation that populism doesn’t deliver is likely to cause a further visible outburst of anger. Which should be good news for the private security industry. This could result in civil or international conflict. It has already happened. Factors that contributed to the Arab spring and the Syrian civil war included a large under-employed population living in stagnant economic conditions with no hope in sight. This probably sounds familiar.

    I am ruling out some sort of positive ‘black swan’ event which changes the game completely and provides meaningful work with great wages across societal boundaries. If I could reliably predict these, I would be writing this from my private Airbus A380.

    Instead I can see four broad categories of outcomes, all of which are ugly:

    • Carry on – carrying on isn’t likely to be sustainable as societal pressures go to breaking point
    • Managed decline – from a rational point-of-view the most ‘possible’ solution. Unpalatable from a voter perspective. It begs the question at what point would the UK economy bottom out? Managed decline makes the most sense as an interim measure whilst a country works out what its new place in the world is and charts a path towards it based on careful strategic investments with limited capital
    • Massive investment – presents a number of challenges that make it nearly impossible for western countries. It would require a long term view – unlikely without consensus driven politics with a high level of comity, huge access to credit – again unlikely with highly indebted economy and a slowly declining credit rating like the UK. Would take too long to satisfy angry voters
    • Massive disruption – the dice is thrown in the air as society tears itself apart and the strong gain control – think China’s Cultural Revolution. Wages and worker rights may drop to make them more cost competitive for low skilled manufacturing allowing for an employed but disgruntled workforce. Power is unlikely to shift too much, the corresponding upheaval in population numbers may provide some supply side pressure on wages when its all over. In all likelihood, it would just reduce pressure for change, increased willingness to work together on a longer term solution, but not provide much medium term economic benefit

    Disruption

    Here is a chart of numerous successful business, some of them are over a century old. AT&T and Verizon can trace their history back to 1877 and the Bell Telephone Company set up by Alexander Graham Bell’s father-in-law. General Electric goes back to work by Thomas Edison in 1880. These companies took from 117 – 137 years to become $200 billion businesses. Facebook took ten years requiring only 3% of the people AT&T needed.

    It would be reasonable to assume that the future is going to create less jobs with given investments rather than more.

    Company#EmployeesYear its market capitalisation became US$200 billion
    Facebook9,1992014
    Microsoft27,0001998
    Apple46,6002010
    Alphabet (Google)46,6002012
    Amazon165,0002015
    Verizon176,8002014
    General Electric239,0001997
    AT&T302,0002007

    So large private enterprises will:

    • Employ less people which means less ancillary demand for services in the locale. Less restaurants, shops, artisanal coffee shops, micro breweries, nail bars, car valets, hotels and hair salons
    • Employ even less unskilled people – what unskilled labour is required will be employed on a flexible basis. Their roles will be competing on ‘total price’ with a global workforce and robotics

    This hypothesis is supported by data from the MIT Technology review which showed that modern US manufacturing managed to increase productivity by 250% whilst reducing staff numbers by over 40%.

    Win-Win to Winner Takes All

    Technological progress and globalisation has resulted in a decline in the middle class in western countries. Pew Research claims that the US middle class declined from 61 per cent of the population in 1970 to 50 per cent by 2015.

    Corresponding average ‘real wages’ for US ‘good producing’ workers peaked by the mid-1970s and have been broadly stagnant since. A pattern mirrored in other developed economies. Hong Kong saw a similar peak from 1967 riots through to the early 1990s until factories moved across the border.

    Manufacturing productivity had grown steadily over that time. You can argue over the data points but the overall trend seems to hold true.

    Owners of capital have enjoyed increased returns versus the providers of labour. Knowledge work, a key part of middle class roles could be easier to export than production lines. A classic example is the bank back office roles that have been exported to India.

    Supply chain

    At the moment UK manufacturing jobs operate as part of a complex supply chain that primarily addresses the European Union as a market. The supply chain is built around a number of factors:

    • The value of the product
    • The weight of the product
    • The volume of the product
    • The cost of shipping versus the cost of production
    • How well the product travels
    • Distribution of product demand
    • Proximity to suppliers
    • Proximity to talent

    This is why companies may package a product in one country and manufacturer in others. Washing powder is a classic example of this. Chocolate travels well, so Cadbury could move production lines of internationally popular products to Poland. There is a greater incentive to move low skilled work out of areas that aren’t geographically central to a given supply chain.  European freedom of movement may have kept jobs in the UK by allowing low and semi-skilled workers to move rather than the factories. This would be of little consolation to UK workers, but would benefit UK tax coffers.

    This complex formula is the reason why jobs move in and out of the UK.

    Cutting the UK out of this supply chain with a hard Brexit ensures that suppliers have to make complex choices. BMW will probably be wondering what UK presence it needs to maintain in order to keep the Mini brand values. It may decide its easier to evolve the quirky Britishness out of the brand over time and just keep it quirky. The Audi TT hasn’t been harmed by actually being assembled in Hungary.

    The majority of components in the supply chain for the Mini production line is based in Germany.

    A post-Brexit UK could be in the position of importing more rather than less products once companies take into account the bigger picture of the supply chains and the EU single market. This will lead to a net loss of working class livelihoods.

    Role of eco-systems

    Richard Florida is a Canadian professor who has spent much of his time looking at urban studies from the perspective of prosperity. He is known for is work around the creative class and urban regeneration (or gentrification). His work is controversial. One key concept he has of relevance to working-class communities is one of ‘clusters’ where eco-systems exist.  When you apply it to traditional working class industries one can see how the jobs aren’t just going to come back. The UK has a series of traditional clusters that are in overall decline, this is best illustrated by the state of chemical, oil refinery and coal sectors which underpin a wide range of manufacturing industries.

    Where new clusters spring up (Silicon Roundabout and the FinTech businesses within the Square Mile) they create employment that much of the UK population is ill-equipped to fulfil.

    Let’s look in greater depth at traditional manufacturing industries that have provided the working class with good playing jobs.

    Factories build on suppliers, who build on raw materials processors, who build on utilities and extractive industries. Take for example industrial revolution era Stoke-on-Trent which was close to high quality clay pits and coal that could be cheaply shipped in from mines in Lancashire or South Yorkshire. All of which required semi-skilled and unskilled jobs that gave the working class their livelihoods.

    Unfortunately for Stoke-on-Trent; clay is readily available around the world, opening up the possibility of production in areas with cheap labour. Automation raised the quality of production and fashion can quickly dictate whether an ‘area’ brand is in demand.

    If we look at the industrial landscape of the United Kingdom, the manufacturing industry has been hollowed away during the 1980s and 1990s. The UK lost 18% of its manufacturing capacity in the space of 18 months during the conservative government of Margaret Thatcher.

    There has been a corresponding (likely terminal) decline in the necessary facilities to support an industrial economy. Now let’s look in-depth at three essential types of facilities that underpin manufacturing:

    • Oil refineries
    • Coal mines
    • Chemical plants

    This base of the UK industrial eco-system is running on ‘life support’ in critical areas.

    I was fortunate to have a great science teacher at school, he once said to me that you could measure the size and health of an industrial economy by the amount of sulphuric and hydrochloric acid it manufactured and consumed. In order to manufacture hydrochloric acid you need a chlorine gas plant – neither chemical is something you want to transport over long distances. The side effects of a leak would be catastrophic.

    The UK currently has one plant to make chlorine gas that is government subsidised because there isn’t a sufficiently large industrial base to support continued profitable production. What industrial capacity is in the UK is perilously close to being snuffed out.

    What is left of the UK chemical industry has consolidated in the North East of England Process Industry Cluster (NEEPIC). Some of the products created are intermediary chemicals for use elsewhere in the European Union. Brexit is likely to have a disruptive effect on some of these manufacturers. The cluster is a key reason why Nissan decided to build a manufacturing plant in Sunderland. NEEPIC is dependent on oil refining capacity for key chemical building blocks (feedstock).

    Oil refineries

    Oil refineries are considered by the public as providers of petrol (gasoline), diesel and jet fuel. The reality is that they provide feedstock (chemical building blocks) for most things in everyday life:

    • Foods
    • Medicines (or we can go back to leeches and blood letting)
    • Paints (containers, large manufactured goods, civil engineering)
    • Dyes to colour fabrics, plastics and other materials
    • Plastics (the modern world as we know it) – structural plastics, coatings, fibres including clothing textiles

    As I write this is, it is easier to look around my desk and count the products that don’t have an oil-derived input – one item, the desk itself which is unpainted. Though I would put good money on it that the trees it was made from were felled with petrol chain saw and transported on a diesel-powered lorry to the saw mill.

    Yet the UK has lost a huge amount of oil refining capacity. From 1974 – 2012 refining capacity almost halved from 148 million tonnes to 77 million tonnes (Energy Institute). This decline happened despite start of UK North sea oil production in 1975.

    Peak production on North Sea oil occurring in 1985 and 1999 (two peaks due to technological innovation). There were 22 active oil refineries in 1974, at the time of writing there are now seven.

    Part of this was driven by changing energy consumption such as the decline of home heating oil and more fuel efficient cars. But a good deal would be due to reduced ability to compete against foreign petro-chemical feedstocks and reduced industrial capacity.

    Oil refining capacity has moved to closer to where the industry is.

    Belgium and the Netherlands have oil refining capacity beyond their internal needs because of their ease of access to continental European markets. Germany as Europe’s industrial powerhouse has the largest refining capacity in the European Union – which matches its industrial economy.

    Much of the capacity to provide chemical feedstocks for industrial use has moved to the Far East; notably Singapore, Japan, Korea, Jamnagar in India and China. Overall industrial production has moved to East and Southeast Asia.

    Coal production

    The working class found coal production as a source of working class jobs. Even coal production in the UK is roughly 10 percent of what it was in 1980. There are no deep coal mines active in the UK, only a handful of open cast mines. Coal is not only useful as a fuel but also a alternative supplier of feedstock for a diverse range of products including fertilisers, plastics and medicines. Even if coal comes back to prominence as oil reserves run out it would take a lot of effort to get UK production going again – perhaps too much effort.

    Managed decline of traditional working class areas

    The purpose of managed decline would be to concentrate efforts where they can make the most impact. London would draw in more people from the hinterlands. Cities like Liverpool would continue to decline in population. Low quality housing (think trailer parks or shanty towns) would cater for the internally displaced workers and there would be a likely increase in casual or gig economy roles in place of many working class roles.

    So what would managed decline of working class areas look like? We have a clue from government discussions after the 1981 Toxteth riots. Lord Geoffrey Howe wrote a letter which was considered too controversial at the time

    “I fear that Merseyside is going to be much the hardest nut to crack,”

    “We do not want to find ourselves concentrating all the limited cash that may have to be made available into Liverpool and having nothing left for possibly more promising areas such as the West Midlands or, even, the North East.

    “It would be even more regrettable if some of the brighter ideas for renewing economic activity were to be sown only on relatively stony ground on the banks of the Mersey.”

    “I cannot help feeling that the option of managed decline is one which we should not forget altogether. We must not expend all our limited resources in trying to make water flow uphill.”

    Howe realised that even discussing the concept at the time would be explosive.

    Retrenchment to focus economically

    In practical terms, it would mean:

    • Re-centralising government departments
    • Not spending on infrastructure beyond critical maintenance
    • Rationalising government support infrastructure: police, hospitals, social services
    • Re-zoning areas from a planning perspective to encourage development only in future clusters
    • Allowing local government to go into bankruptcy protection and under go US-style emergency management
    • Once population decline hits a critical mass, turning off the last services, rather like the city of Detroit has done
    • Focus infrastructure investment on ‘clusters’
    • Connecting benefits to re-location

    This process would then give time for western countries; in particular the UK, to re-invent themselves and think about their economic purpose in the world beyond consumption.

    The Chinese government have already started on this process whilst their economy is still in a high state of growth – looking to move up the manufacturing value chain, moving into the professional and financial services sectors that the west currently occupy. On the flip side they have not flinched from closing down excess capacity in the steel industry and low value industries. This is causing economic hardship amongst unskilled workers in Guongzhou and the steel towns of Hubei province.

    Former clothing factories are being bulldozed to make way for corporate campuses. Small electronics factories in Shenzhen are making way for a financial services centre including a stock exchange.

    If one thinks about the Chinese experience and their migration to higher value work, where would the UK go next and what does mean for the future of the British working class?

    More information

  • Jia Yueting + more news

    Jia Yueting

    LeEco’s CEO Jia Yueting Says Company Overstretched, Now Running Out of Cash – Slashdot – possible acquisition target for Huawei? Jia Yueting is the epitome of a Chinese success story. LeEco was a sprawling technology conglomerate, he owns billions in assets and has an actress trophy wife. LeEco started off as an online video platform, Netflix would be a good western analogue. The LeEco service is on Chinese smart TVs. From there Jia Yueting expanded LeEco into smartphones including a share in Coolpad and mobile apps. Jia Yueting spearheaded a move into Chinese real estate, sports and even electric cars through Faraday Future. All of this expansion has been funded by listings and a mountain of debt that financed the Jia Yueting expansion efforts.

    Business

    Founder Dilution | A VC – great breakdown

    Culture

    Remembering the Clancy Brothers on the anniversary of Tom’s death (VIDEOS) – interesting to hear how the beat poets and and counterculture influenced something I thought was auld Irish

    Economics

    UK trade deficit widens unexpectedly as exports fall despite pound drop | The Guardian – “If we are lucky, the weak pound may boost exports, but I would highlight that export growth tends to be driven more by the strength of overseas demand, rather than the exchange rate.”

    Ideas

    A ‘Highly Lethal’ War Of ‘Fleeting’ Advantages: Multi-Domain Battle « Breaking Defense – exceptionally grim reading

    YouGov | Should Labour be a workers’ party, or a party of the liberal left? – interesting read, one can see that the ‘Labour voters’ are a more natural constituency for UKIP and the Conservatives. Classically the voters which kept Thatcher in power

    The influencer economy is real, but brands and agencies are at risk of destroying it | Campaign – great op-ed by Rob Hinchcliffe

    Innovation

    UPS, SAP, Fast Radius pact for industrial 3D printing – Business Insider – blurring the line between logistics and manufacturing

    Legal

    Google rejects EU Android competition charges | RTE – but they are an effective monopoly rather like Windows complete with bundling issues

    The legal questions at the heart of the High Court Article 50 ruling – BBC News – interesting how the points have been highlighted in terms of law. The precedent post-Brexit would be more interesting

    Marketing

    Shell #makethefuture – Best Day of My Life – interesting, odd music based campaign by Shell

    Media

    Decoding the GDPR and its implications for UK children | LSE Media Policy Project – interesting analysis

    Online

    Silicon Valley Is Worried That Trump Is Going To Grab Them By The Data – BuzzFeed News – interesting comments by Pinboard founder

    Retailing

    Shop Til You Drop? Shanghai Mall Opens “Husband Nursery” | What’s On Weibo – interesting trial by Vanke, I wonder if they will roll it out to other properties

    Security

    China’s new cybersecurity law is bad news for business | TechCrunch – its bad for non-Chinese businesses

    Technology

    Apple has killed off everything good about the Macbook Pro – TechEye – size zero design obsession bullshit

    Web of no web

    Sensor City strikes China Deal – not sure how UK will gain in longer term

  • Vladimir Putin + more news

    Vladimir Putin

    Why do diplomats use this alien WhatsApp emoji for Vladimir Putin? | Technology | The Guardian – its hardly diplomatic to carry on this in this way even if it is referring to Vladimir Putin. Secondly, I am pretty confident that Vladimir Putin and his team have a good insight into it. Finally I’d still want to be using Signal rather than giving Facebook indirect oversight of messaging. Given the ubiquity of WhatsApp, I would have thought that the security services that report into President Vladimir Putin would have found a way to crack WhatsApp

    China

    How did China’s Xi Jinping secure ‘core’ status in just four years? | South China Morning Post

    Culture

    This Cheesy, 1980s Promotional Video for a Northern Nightclub is UK Nightlife’s Finest Hour | Thump – OMG

    Economics

    Is the Gig Economy Cannibalizing or Creating Jobs? Here’s Some Early Evidence. – The Experts – WSJ – that the spreading gig economy (at least in the case of ride-sharing) is, in fact, substituting for some payroll employment, or at least depressing its growth.

    Independent work: Choice, necessity, and the gig economy | McKinsey & Company – good read

    Finance

    The Story of the Self Destruction of Deutsche Bank – SPIEGEL ONLINE – fascinating read

    China Prepares To Impose Curbs, “Capital Controls” On Bitcoin – inevitable to control capital outflows. Given China’s market maker status it could also weaponise bitcoin

    Gadgets

    VCR era ends due to lack of chips – and demand | Electronics EETimes – interesting analysis of the engineering that went into analogue video recorders

    Innovation

    Tim Cook on Apple’s strategy and Clayton Christensen’s “Jobs to be Done” theory – Business Insider – basically do the new products actually have use cases?

    Luxury

    Why the fashion world won’t let Amazon in 

    Media

    Tokyo Festival: Online Piracy on the Rise in Japan | Variety – problems with assessing traffic on Alexa as a sample. Also piracy has made up for problems getting Japanese content to market and even made markets for them

    Microsoft Keeps Dossiers on Journalists and Sent Us One By Accident | Gizmodo – reminds me of the Fred Vogel dossier sent a number of years ago, its not NSA level dirt unfortunately

    Online

    Google is returning to China? It never really left | Technology | The Guardian – There has been issues accessing dashboards though

    Merkel: murky internet giants distort perception of reality – The Local – “the algorithms must be made public, so that one can inform oneself as an interested citizen on questions like: what influences my behaviour on the internet and that of others?” 

    “These algorithms, when they are not transparent, can lead to to a distortion of our perception, they narrow our breadth of information.”

    Security

    Troy Hunt: The Red Cross Blood Service: Australia’s largest ever leak of personal data – just wow!

    Divorced by Apple in California | josh.com – which nukes Apple’s security measures if true

    Software

    The Wix Mobile App, a WordPress Joint | Matt Mullenweg – not terribly surprised by this. WordPress represents the old ethos of web 2.0, Wix represents the Uber or Facebook Hotel California mentality

    Technology

    Microsoft Is Looking Like the New Apple | MIT Technology Review – this isn’t the headline Apple want. Its kind of like the immediate aftermath of Windows 95. I think Apple’s interface design call is right but its marketing, product design and pricing is fucked. If they had put 32GB RAM in the machine, hadn’t upped the pricing and messed with the ports as badly this wouldn’t be a problem. It’s execution which is failing them

    Wireless

    LG mobile unit records possible worst quarterly loss ever at nearly $400 million – wow this is sad, I felt LG had done a good job with the phone and will discourage design innovation in the future

    Xiaomi Mi MIX Is An Edgeless Concept Phone That’s Actually Available For Purchase: Snapdragon 821, 6 GB RAM And More : TECH : Tech Times – big challenge to get back its crown in China from Huawei and Oppo. P9 or this? No contest to be honest with you the MIX wins hands down