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Canonical details first Ubuntu smartphone partners, devices due to arrive later this year

Feb19
by Sindy Cator on February 19, 2014 at 4:44 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, Mobile

ubuntufeat2 520x245 Canonical details first Ubuntu smartphone partners, devices due to arrive later this year

Canonical has confirmed that it has now signed agreements with two hardware partners to start delivering Ubuntu-based smartphones around the world later this year.

The announcment not only confirms that the company’s aspirations for a competitive mobile OS are still alive and kicking, but also that progress has been made since its failed Indiegogo project last year. Indeed, it’s now confirmed that the first devices will come from Spanish manufacturer bq and Chinese device maker Meizu.

While these might not be household names outside of their home markets (although they are notable in Europe and China respectively), it’s still good to hear that there are firm commitments to bring devices that run Ubuntu OS to market. The announcement also dovetails in neatly with Meizu’s announcement last month that it plans to expand its reach into the US market from Q3 of this year.

While specific details of handsets weren’t revealed, Canonical did say that “development programs have begun with the partners to provide smartphones with a superior user experience on mid to high-end hardware,” so it doesn’t seem like we’ll be seeing lower-end devices, at least not to begin with. When they do arrive at an as-yet unspecified time this year, the handsets will be available to buy directly through bq, Meizu and the Ubuntu.com websites.

The company wouldn’t reveal specifics of the devices, but Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Canonical and Ubuntu, hinted that the bq device will be dual-SIM, while Meizu would likely be launching a device running Ubuntu OS, but on hardware that already exists in the company’s line-up.

Naturally, Ubuntu phones aren’t likely to make it into the mainstream without getting the backing and distribution afforded by national networks and retail chains, but the company said progress is being made on that front too and that Ubuntu has received significant support from “the world’s biggest carriers, some of which intend to work with OEM partners to bring phones to market this year”. So you could be seeing them in your local retailer’s shop sooner than expected.

Ubuntu mobile Canonical details first Ubuntu smartphone partners, devices due to arrive later this year

A long road

It has only been a year, but even so it has been a long road for Canonical to get even this far with Ubuntu for smartphones, and despite regular(-ish) updates about progress this is the first tangible confirmation of smartphone hardware that’s expected to be delivered this year – even if there isn’t an actual launch date just yet.

Despite the slog, Canonical is doing all it can to take the concept from the drawing board to reality and through things like working closely with the Carrier Advisory Group it formed in June last year, it might just have a shot at presenting a flexible, customizable OS that appeals to operators as well as consumers.

“Ubuntu introduces a new UI paradigm for mobile devices. Ubuntu puts content and services at the center of the experience, rather than hiding them behind stores and apps. This gives consumers a fresh and rich way to engage with their favorite videos, music and other mobile activities. It also means OEMs and operators have unprecedented customization opportunities with a common UI toolkit, which gives devices their own unique footprint and without fragmenting the platform,” Canonical said.

The challenge now that these first devices seem to be ‘in the bag’ will be convincing a recognizable OEM to run Ubuntu on its own smartphones. If that happens, consumers could soon begin to sit up and start paying attention.

Shuttleworth also said that the company was still planning to deliver Ubuntu on tablets too, but that it is “less of a milestone” than shipping smartphones for a company that already makes PCs. Nonetheless, there will be smartphones and tablets running the Touch OS next week at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, so we’ll be going hands-on for a better idea of what to expect from an Ubuntu smartphone.

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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Understanding what vision means in a ‘visionary founder’

Feb19
by Sindy Cator on February 19, 2014 at 4:21 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Entrepreneur

glasses vision 520x245 Understanding what vision means in a visionary founder

Carlos Eduardo Espinal is a partner at Seedcamp, an early stage mentoring and investment program that engages startups through monthly Seedcamp Events, where entrepreneurs present their companies, network, receive mentoring, and compete for investment by Seedcamp.


“If you have visions, you should go see a doctor” – Helmut Schmidt, one of the most admired German chancellors.

Because I know how confusing and frustrating the fundraising process can be for a founder, one of the topics I like exploring is “How to get into the mind of an investor” – particularly when an investor is evaluating you for an investment.

Whilst the easier topics to tackle tend to be quantitative in nature, the harder ones tend to be the “fuzzier” qualitative ones.

In that spirit, I think we’ve all heard how investors want to invest in a “solid team” and how they want to invest in founders with a “strong vision” – but what does that mean exactly?

With visions, mission statements, and all kinds of vagueness as part of many self-help books, do these elements really have any place in the fast-moving, cold and hard world of startups? In the context of the early stage high growth startup world, what does having “vision” really mean?

Let’s start by defining what a founder’s vision is not.

Vision does not equal power

A founder’s vision is not about how much money you want to make once you exit, nor is it about obtaining power or prestige. It isn’t about knowing exactly what the future will bring, nor is it about doing something no one else has ever done before.

Rather, a founder’s vision is about how you communicate and put into action your values, beliefs, and ideals in producing and creating something of value for yourself, your founding team, your employees, your investors, and your customers. A founder’s vision is the foundation of a company’s culture and brand.

In the words of James Kouzes and Barry Posner, authors of The Leadership Challenge: ”There’s nothing more demoralizing than a leader who can’t clearly articulate why we’re doing what we’re doing.”

A founder’s vision, therefore, creates a company’s culture. This culture may not always be visible to outsiders of the company (nor is it generally communicated to potential investors specifically as such), but it is visible through the company’s culture, the brand, and brand values of your company are ultimately determined.

Recruitments 730x404 Understanding what vision means in a visionary founder

It is the brand of your company which is the outward-facing aspect to your company that customers and potential investors engage with. This brand allows you to attract potential employees, customers, investors and partners.

Thus, I believe that vision determines culture and culture determines brand. Think of many brands you love and respect and you will likely be able to trace their authenticity to one or several individuals (even if they are no longer there) who created the vision of the company and set the culture for all the employees to guide them through the creation of the products and services you love.

Think of the ones that you liked at one point but no longer do, and you’ll likely be able to trace why to a point in time where there was a break-away or ‘sell-out’ from the original vision that started it.

How is a founder’s vision applied?

In some startups, a founder identifies a need they personally have (they are the customer), and thus, builds a company around a product or service to satisfy that need.

Alternatively, there are other founders that find ideas within markets that didn’t previously exist (they intuit a need for a customer). In some cases this happens by design and research; others happen by accident, as was the case with the 3M Post It note.

Whichever way it may come, founders that have a strong vision – that is, one that’s synthesized, communicated and articulated to their team (and their customers) – can capture these opportunities and evolve them to become successful businesses.

Effectively, a founder’s vision facilitates the decision-making process the team uses to create a company’s products and services. It is through the clarity of a founder’s vision that focus is brought to the planning and decision making process within a company, and as a consequence the company can function efficiently and increase its probability of success.

Authentically connecting with your clients

In a world where new products are constantly emerging and many are copied by unfair competitors, it is the strong adherence to your vision and the culture and brand it creates that ultimately engages your customers to become loyal supporters and fervent defenders of your company.

Unfortunately, if you betray your customer’s trust by deviating from your brand’s values, they will likely throw you and your products under the proverbial bus, so to speak.

In his TED talk about how great leaders inspire action, Simon Sinek, shares his golden circle of “Why, how, and what.”

You can watch the talk in full, but the key point is that it all begins with the ‘why’ a leader must articulate to be effective… the “why” determines culture and the “why” determines ultimate “how” you do things and “what” you ultimately make.

A talented designer and good friend of mine, Gearoid O’Rourke  shared a thought in one of his talks that I really think captures why it is important to take the creation of a founder’s vision and company culture seriously. In his words: “Products can be copied, but culture cannot…

“Even if your products are copied, you will always be ahead of your competitors because they can’t copy your culture [and culture is what lets you innovate].”

Once determined, the culture of your company will help you make decisions about how to engage and communicate with your customers, whom to hire, what to prioritize, and whom to partner with. In effect, your vision, your culture, and your brand will become the foundation and focus of all you do.

Where to find your vision

Your ability as a founder to set this vision and culture is the attribute that investors look for. If you are unable to determine and set a vision and culture for your company, unfortunately, you are likely to have others, such as influential mentors and perhaps even your investors set it for you. And as we all know, we can’t be someone we are not, and ultimately, this will likely lead to failure.

If you are in the early early stages of starting a company and you’re really more just thinking of starting a company, I’d highly recommend you spend some time trying to understand what drives you and why, for if you want to embark on the difficult journey that is to become a founder and leader of future employees and future shareholders, it would really help everything if you are be able to share the “why” of why you do things.

And in case you are reading this and thinking to yourself, “but investors only care about traction,” I’ve seen several cases of where an investor is willing to take a huge leap of faith on a founder, even before any visible traction – but only when the investor feels there is a strong vision behind the company.

Therefore, I leave you with this thought: Traction comes from happy and loyal customers, happy and loyal customers come from a great product or service that does what you say it does.

A great product or service that does what you say it does comes from a team that has a coherent culture that allows them to know what to do, and a coherent culture comes from a strong and clear vision from the company’s leadership team.

Image credit: Shutterstock/Skylines

└ Tags: syndicated
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Amazon takes its virtual ‘Coins’ currency beyond the Kindle Fire and into the wider Android ecosystem

Feb19
by Sindy Cator on February 19, 2014 at 2:21 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

122478016 520x245 Amazon takes its virtual Coins currency beyond the Kindle Fire and into the wider Android ecosystem

A little more than a year after Amazon first announced Amazon Coins, the e-commerce giant has revealed that the virtual currency can now be used on any Android device.

Amazon Coins launched for Kindle Fire users in the US last May, and was subsequently rolled out to the UK and Germany in November. Initially, it was clear that this push was part of Amazon’s plans to help app developers monetize their Appstore submissions, as it encouraged Kindle Fire owners to purchase apps, games and make in-app purchases on their tablet. For launch, every Kindle Fire owner was given $5 worth of Coins, which in effect was 500 coins.

And now, Amazon Coins can be spent on Android phones and tablets too. All you need to do is download the latest version of Amazon Appstore, and your Coins balance will automatically appear. You can upgrade to the latest version by visiting this link, while new customers can download the Amazon Appstore to their device by clicking here (it’s not available to download from Google Play).

Consumers can also earn Coins when they buy directly from Amazon’s Appstore, as opposed to the usual Google Play conduit, and they can save up to 10% by paying with coins rather than cash. For example, 10,000 Amazon coins costs £90 in the UK rather than £100, but they can still be used to redeem £100 worth of content.

Screenshot 2014 02 19 14 56 26 220x391 Amazon takes its virtual Coins currency beyond the Kindle Fire and into the wider Android ecosystem    Screenshot 2014 02 19 14 46 18 220x391 Amazon takes its virtual Coins currency beyond the Kindle Fire and into the wider Android ecosystem

From a developer’s perspective, introducing credits to replace cash-purchases is designed not only to make it easier for people to procure content, but it also alters the consumer mindset so that they’re not thinking directly in terms of ‘money’.

Amazon says that Appstore developers will still earn their standard 70% revenue share when customers make purchases using Amazon Coins across the Android ecosystem, which is certainly a good move as it encourages developers to adopt the virtual currency.

└ Tags: media, news, syndicated
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Expect Labs opens MindMeld, its anticipatory computing platform, to app developers

Feb19
by Sindy Cator on February 19, 2014 at 2:00 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

IMG 0004 520x245 Expect Labs opens MindMeld, its anticipatory computing platform, to app developers

Following the release of its consumer-facing MindMeld iPad app late last year, Expect Labs has opened up its anticipatory computing platform to developers through the launch of a MindMeld API.

MindMeld uses natural language processing to understand your context and then serve up relevant information before you’ve even asked for it. The new API will allow developers to add a highly-customizable layer of intelligence to their apps.

While we can expect to see virtual assistant apps similar to the MindMeld app, Expect Labs has designed the API so that it has plenty of other uses. The startup is billing the technology as a third-party alternative to advanced search functionality like Google Now and Siri. Some companies have expressed interest in applying MindMeld to customer service situations in order to provide better contextual awareness to customers, while others could use it to provide smart notifications.

Basic access to the API is available to developers for free, but premium plans will increase the number of documents MindMeld will index for them and the amount of requests users can make per month.

Expect Labs CEO Tim Tuttle said the firm decided to create the API after being approach by developers and companies that wanted to use MindMeld in their own applications.

“We took that technology and made it so we can plug it into anything,” he said.

The startup has also picked up several powerful backers that expressed interest in integrating MindMeld into their products. Investors include Samsung, Telefónica, Google Ventures and Liberty Global Ventures.

➤ MindMeld API

└ Tags: syndicated
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Apple announces its first iTunes Festival in the US, five nights at SXSW

Feb19
by Sindy Cator on February 19, 2014 at 1:51 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Apple has announced its first ever iTunes Festival for the US, as it arrives at SXSW for five nights next month.

The annual iTunes Festival has taken place in London since 2007, but from March 11-15 it will be hosted at ACL Live at the Moody Theater, in Austin, Texas. And some big names will be in tow too, including Coldplay, Imagine Dragons, Pitbull, Keith Urban and more.

For those not in attendance, the festival will also be available for free via an on-demand stream on iTunes.

➤ Apple Announces iTunes Festival Coming to SXSW

└ Tags: apple, news, syndicated
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