SEA Games: Singapore complete clean sweep in table tennis

Feng Tianwei (file picture)
JAKARTA: Before they went into action here at the 26th SEA Games, Team Singapore’s table tennis stars walked the playing hall and the streets without any fuss.
It was a very different story on Wednesday.

The team of eight were mobbed by local fans at the Soemantri Brodjonegoro Sports Complex after sweeping all five of the gold medals on offer in table tennis.

It was an all-Singapore affair on the final day of table tennis, with world No 4 Feng Tianwei claiming the gold medal in the women’s singles and Gao Ning emerging as the men’s singles champion.

Feng, 25, proved too good for her younger team-mate, Isabelle Li, the 17-year-old debutant.

There was tremendous support for the two Singapore women in the stands, that also featured a contingent of Team Singapore supporters, including chef-de-mission Dr Tan Eng Liang.

Feng was never troubled, wrapping up the final 4-0 (11-3, 11-4, 11-9, 11-5) in 35 minutes.

Said the defending champion, who also picked up a gold in the women’s doubles: “I think today Isabelle was not so used to my style and I played better and was more steady.

“Isabelle is a player with a lot of promise. She’s good and she just needs to work on her aggression and attack.”

Feng returns to Singapore on Thursday before departing for London on November 21 to compete in the ITTF Pro Tour Grand Finals.

Watched by her family members and friends, last year’s Youth Olympic Games silver medallist Isabelle was delighted to finish second on her debut.

“There is still a gulf in standard between us, and it was a hard match for me. This is my first time competing against Tianwei and it was a very special moment for me playing against a world champion and world No 4,” said the teenager.

In the men’s singles final that followed, it was sweet revenge for veteran Gao Ning, who notched a 4-0 (11-6, 11-9, 12-10, 11-8) victory over team-mate Yang Zi. The 29-year-old had lost the Commonwealth Games gold to Yang in New Delhi last year,

Gao Ning, who claimed his third successive singles gold in the event, said: “It’s a good feeling. I think I prepared more sufficiently this time around and clinched the crucial points.”

With five golds and four silver medals from five events, table tennis is the most successful sport for Singapore here.

Selection issues had dogged the paddlers ahead of the SEA Games, as the Singapore Table Tennis Association (STTA) got into a tangle with the Singapore National Olympic Council (SNOC).

It was eventually resolved, and speaking on Wednesday, STTA president Lee Bee Wah said: “I’m very proud of them, especially our younger players Xuejie and Isabelle. I think the results speak for itself … the STTA wants to groom younger players.

“In future, the policy of sending one set of senior players to get medals and another set of younger ones for development will remain (for SEA Games).”

Chef-de-mission Tan, a vice-president at the SNOC, personally congratulated Lee on the team’s success.

“Our congratulations to the paddlers and the association for winning five gold medals. They deserve our fullest and heartiest congratulations.

Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/sportsnews/view/1165943/1/.html

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Pacquiao vs Marquez Winners and Losers: Mayweather, UFC Get a Bump, and So Does Boxing

Nacho Beristain went into the Hall of Fame this year, but Saturday may have been his finest hour. (Photo by Rick Stewart/Getty Images)

Nacho Beristain went into the Hall of Fame this year, but Saturday may have been his finest hour.

As with every big fight weekend, the results and talk from the weekend have reverberated throughout the entire sports world. Regardless of the result, the weekend usually changes the landscape and gets the talk started for the next big event. Here are my personal winners and losers from the weekend.

Winners

Juan Manuel Marquez: In the eyes of many, Marquez became the greatest Mexican fighter of his era this weekend, and he is easily the biggest winner coming out of Saturday. You get the feeling if he would have gotten the victory, it would have been met with less outrage than Pacquiao winning, despite the fact it was a close fight. Juan came out looking every bit the phenom that Manny went in appearing, and essentially gave the boxing world the blueprint for beating the unbeatable. He asserted his place amongst the pound for pound kings and also bolstered his already Hall of Fame-level resume. The only thing that could have made the weekend bigger for him is if he had actually won. Where JMM goes from here is anybody’s guess. He seemed genuinely uninterested in a fourth fight against Pacquiao (money could change that) and it’s hard to blame him. In his eyes he has beaten Manny three times (twice in my opinion) and never been rewarded for it by the judges. People are suggesting a 140-pound fight against Erik Morales, and that would interest people, but a retirement wouldn’t surprise me.

Nacho Beristain: He tactically beat Freddie Roach in the fight. While some will question him telling Marquez that he had the fight in the bag, there is no denying the game plan he readied for the enigma that is/was Manny Pacquiao. Also, even after the advice, though Marquez did take the foot off the gas a little bit, it wasn’t like Manny went out guns blazing either. It could be a result of both taking that approach that the fight ended in the manner that it did, not just Nacho’s advice. Either way, Nacho came out of the weekend looking better than everybody but JMM for the great job he did in camp.

Star-divide

Floyd Mayweather Jr: The biggest winner of those not in attendance this weekend has to be Lil Floyd. By doing nothing, he watched his biggest challenger look mortal, and beatable, and now has all the reason in the world to tote his superiority. He becomes the #1 pound for pound fighter (and welterweight) in the world from his couch. Floyd could also be seen as a loser from this weekend because he may lose out on a record payday, but his point in many ways is already proven. Floyd made the statement that he is the best counter puncher ever, and while that is a lofty title, there is no denying that he is at least one of the very best. It’s hard not to see a fresher (in ring) Floyd and his style not being the favorite against Manny now.

Marquez beat Manny with movement, great timing and accurate counter punching, three things Mayweather has mastered. And now with news that the Pacquiao camp (see: Bob Arum) will not be pursuing the May 5th fight with Mayweather, he also gets the added bonus of being able to tell the world (justifiably so) that they are ducking him. While many will say this leaves Floyd with little to no options for May 5th, I think it opens the door for some very intriguing fights. A win against Sergio Martinez would be just as big a legacy-defining as a win against Pacquiao would be, and that fight is there for the taking. The other intriguing options are at 154 as well, as Mayweather could opt to take a huge fight with Canelo Alverez. At welterweight the options are slim. He could face Andre Berto, or if Amir Khan wants to jump on that sword that could be an option. An unlikely scenario is the winner of Cotto vs Margarito, but count me in the camp that says there is no way Mayweather gets to cash out against any Top Rank fighters. While Mayweather may not get to see the $50 million payday against Manny that he wants, he still will collect his standard $30 million against somebody on May 5th.

UFC: If you we’re like me, you passed on watching the first hour of the PPV you paid $65 for to watch the UFC on Fox event. It played out a lot like I expected it to, an hour-long UFC commercial with a fight in the middle. But critical acclaim (or lack thereof) isn’t why this was a winner. The event drew 5.7 million viewers, peaking at 8.8 million, making it easily the most watched UFC event ever. Even thought the fight only lasted a little more than a minute, this is a rousing success and it got more eyes than ever on their sport. I’m not one to lump the two sports together, nor do I think one’s success is the other’s demise, but this is relevant to boxing. It means there is a market on network TV for combat sports.

Boxing: Despite the disputed decision, boxing was at the forefront of the sports world for a week or so and its two biggest stars got plenty of camera time. And then, boxing delivered. Pacquiao vs Marquez was a very good card, despite the turd in the punch bowl known as Bradley vs Casamayor. Alvarado vs Prescott was excellent and Pacquiao vs Marquez was 12 great rounds of tactical action. There still is nothing in sports like a big fight, and this weekend was just another example of that. The tense air in the arena that you can just sense from your couch between exchanges, the moment right before the opening bell rings, holding your breath during exchanges wondering if the fight will end instantly — man, do I love boxing. There are a plethora of “Boxing is Dying!” paragraphs written this week in Pacquiao articles, but all ratings and viewers numbers suggest otherwise, and its something that I would assume that the diehard boxing fans don’t entertain. Many writers are also lumping MMA and boxing together lazily and I just don’t agree. The mainstream sports media seems to think boxing is to the UFC as the AFL was to the NFL. I see the boxing/MMA relationship as more similar to football and rugby. Sure, the ball looks the same, and there are elements of each sport that are similar, but ultimately they are two very different sports. All in all it was a great weekend for combat sports, as boxing and MMA most likely saw their biggest audiences of the year.

Losers

Manny Pacquiao: Strange that the “winner” of the fight is its biggest loser, but Manny undeniably took his biggest beating in the ring since, well, since his last Marquez fight, and he took an even bigger beating from the media and boxing fans. Manny became mortal Saturday night, and the ensuing response left a bad taste in a lot of peoples’ mouths. Word came out the next day that Team Pacquiao would not be pursuing a fight with Mayweather, which was perceived by many as a duck. People just expected MORE from Manny, I guess. I thought he acquitted himself well in the fight, but just was beaten by the better man. Manny leaving the post-fight presser after just two questions, and none about Marquez or Mayweather made matters worse.

The public and media’s reverence of Manny is waning. This was one of the more scathing paragraphs I read about Manny all week, via Jay Caspian Kang for Grantland:

“But then I wondered if maybe I was just being un-brainwashed about Manny Pacquiao, who achieved his invincible status by fighting a broken Oscar De La Hoya, a pretender in Ricky Hatton, a possibly broken Miguel Cotto, a thoroughly uninterested Joshua Clottey, a possibly broken Antonio Margarito, and a shot-to-all-hell Shane Mosley. After Saturday night, the angle on Manny’s past three years should shift a bit – is he the all-time great who moved up in weight or is he the smiling, marketable star of a desperate sport? Maybe he’s both? I certainly couldn’t tell – all I knew was that when HBO wasn’t carrying the fight and when I wasn’t hearing Manny Steward talk about all-time greats, Pac-Man didn’t look the same.”

Manny came out of this weekend much worse than he went in, and it will be interesting to see how he and his team respond. The early talk is they want Marquez in an immediate rematch, and while some do want to see that again, many are going to wonder aloud why he isn’t agreeing to fight Mayweather, again.

Bob Arum: Bob would have been a loser even if Manny had decisively won the fight. He had a rough week leading up to the fight, putting his foot in his mouth over and over. What made matters worse was his reaction to the fight, immediately writing off a May fight with Mayweather. Bob has taken some hits on the internet and it seems like most are just plain tired of his act. Arum will continue to draw the ire of boxing fans until he shows that he legitimately wants to make Mayweather vs Pacquiao happen.

Freddie Roach: Freddie is another act that some boxing fans (definitely count me into this group) have grown tired of, and there have been signs of some sort of schism in the Pacquiao camp before Alex Ariza went all “They shoulda listened to me all along” this week. Fact is, whatever Roach’s gameplan for Saturday was, it didn’t work, and it was apparent early on that it wouldn’t. He was never able to get Manny to make the proper adjustments. Also it seems as if the entire camp just assumed Manny would “Hatton” Marquez, and that in and of itself is a fatal flaw of the trainer. This is viewed by some as the third time that Nacho has out dueled him in the ring, and Roach came off as whiny and a sore loser after the fight. He also was part of the “We want another shot at Marquez” contingent that is causing fans to ask the same question: “If you think you won, why a rematch?” Also Freddie had a PR slip up with him telling a group of reporters that he thought Manny should have a tuneup fight next. Not exactly everything going to plan for Roach.

HBO: Watching the fight with unbiased ears, you couldn’t help but notice the biased mouths of the HBO crew. I have grown accustomed to the fact that there are story lines that the announce team (and HBO as a whole) want to push. I have come to grips with the fact that sometimes during action Jim Lampley is just going to spend a minute giving us some backstory they want us to know, rather than, you know, calling the fight. Saturday was worse, though. Between Lederman’s bogus scorecard and Lampley saying landed punches from Marquez were blocked, it seemed to me that they were very pro-Pacquiao. It wasn’t until I read some stories later that I saw I wasn’t the only one. Of course it was more beneficial for HBO that Manny win, but it doesn’t have to sound like it the whole fight. A great performance was largely ignored by the HBO team in lieu of them exaggerating the minimal success Manny was having to further their pre-determined story lines. As a whole, I don’t dislike the HBO team as much as others. I like Lampley’s penchant to hammer home an excelent line in the midst of high drama, I think Manny Steward and Roy Jones offer great insight, I enjoy some of Max Kellerman’s narratives (Larry Merchant is missing here for a reason). What I never enjoy from the HBO team is their need to spin their story lines during the fight, despite the action in the ring being different. HBO has a tendency to do this, but on Saturday they completely ignored the action in the ring to tell the “Invincible Manny Pacquiao” story. In doing so, they missed their opportunity to tell the incredible Juan Manuel Marquez story.

Source: http://www.badlefthook.com/2011/11/16/2567633/pacquiao-vs-marquez-winners-losers-mayweather-ufc-on-fox-nacho-beristain-freddie-roach-arum

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How Google, eBay, And PayPal Are Gearing Up For A Very Mobile Holiday Shopping Season

holiday

Online holiday shopping reached record levels in 2010. And e-commerce spending is up this year. All signs point to consumers spending even more online this holiday season. I sat down with executives from Google, eBay, PayPal and ShopKick to discuss the trends that are expected to emerge in the e-commerce space over the next few months.  They center around mobile, tablets, and deals.

PayPal has more than doubled its mobile payments volume since the 2010 holiday shopping season, and we haven’t even hit the thick of this year’s rush. eBay is projecting $5 billion in mobile payments volume in 2010 and this number could increase in the next few months. And Google projects that 15 percent of total search on Black Friday (the day after Thanksgiving and one of the biggest shopping days of the year) will come from mobile devices. Tablet devices are now a part of the online shopping experience and retailers are taking note. Clearly, all signs point to the fact that this could be the breakout year for mobile shopping.

Mobile, Mobile, Mobile

All of the companies I spoke to unanimously agreed that this would be the year of mobile for the holiday shopping season. Steve Yankovich, head of eBay’s mobile business operations and development, says he expects this to be the biggest year for mobile sales for eBay yet. eBay has said that the company expects to see $5 billion in gross merchandise volume in 2011, and this will be partly buoyed by a strong mobile presence in November and December.

PayPal’s Senior Director for Mobile, Laura Chambers, echoes Yankovich’s forecasts and says that merchants are even preparing for the onslaught of traffic to their mobile sites. A number of big retailers, such as Armani Exchange, Guess and The Limited have recently put PayPal’s mobile express checkout as an option for payments on their mobile sites as a way to help the conversion process. “We are seeing strong investments by online retailers for mobile shopping this year,” she says.

Chambers says that last year, the peak day for mobile payments for PayPal was December 12, with $4.7 million in mobile payments volume. Now PayPal is seeing $10 million in mobile payments per day, and we haven’t even officially hit the holiday shopping period. Clearly, the mobile payments numbers could even triple from last year to this year.

While many consumers may shop on mobile for their holiday purchases, the usage of product search, barcode scanning, and other informative apps will also play a big part in this year’s mobile shopping. eBay’s RedLaser barcode scanning apps have seen scans go up 50 percent over the past year. If you aren’t familiar with how it works, RedLaser will scan the barcode of a physical product and show you where you can buy it on eBay’s properties and where it is available in local store locations around you (via Milo) and for how much. The app has been updated with PayPal functionality so that users can actually buy the product directly from the app.

Another shopping app developer who has high hopes for mobile this holiday season is ShopKick. Co-founder Cyriac Roeding says that this year will be the year of mobile for physical shopping. For background, Shopkick automatically recognizes when someone with the free Android or iPhone app on their phone walks into a store. Once a Shopkick Signal is detected, the app delivers reward points called “kickbucks” to the user for walking into a retail store, trying on clothes, scanning a barcode and other actions. Kickbucks can then be redeemed across all partner stores for gift card rewards or for Facebook Credits. User can also receive special discounts on specific products at partners stores like Macy’s, Best Buy or Target.

Roeding explains that the cell phone is the only interactive platform you carry with you in a physical store, and retailers are looking to use the platform to help drive transactions. Clearly, a mobile rewards app that offers in-store discounts can help do this. “The internet has caused brick and mortar retailers more trouble than benefit over the past fifteen years. Now retailers are catching on to how the internet can help retailers—that’s where mobile comes in.”

Sameer Samat, VP of Product Management for Google Commerce, tells me that the search giant is seeing a growing number of users are making buying decisions using their mobile phone. “We are definitely seeing m-commerce conversions growing and becoming bigger over time,” he says. “But users are also using their mobile phone to search for products and find local availability.”

Samat says that Google has seen a 200 percent growth in mobile product search usage and Google Shopper app downloads over the past year. Shopper, which is available for iOS and Android, allows you to find product prices, reviews, specs, local inventory of products at nearby stores, and more.

As we mentioned above, Google is forecasting that 15 percent of total search on Black Friday. will come from mobile. “There’s no doubt that users are now making buying decisions using their mobile phone,” says Samat. “And we are seeing m-commerce conversions growing and becoming bigger over time.”

Tablets

As tablets have grown to be the go-to browsing device, the iPad, and other devices are also becoming a way to shop. And retailers are catching on to this trend. According to a National Retail Federation study, 20 percent of retailers have invested in tablet device apps this holiday season.

With this in mind, Google debuted Catalogs in August, an app for tablet devices that includes 200 catalogs from major brands including Anthropologie, Bare Escentuals, Bergdorf Goodman, Crate and Barrel, L.L. Bean, Lands’ End, Macy’s, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom, Pottery Barn, Saks Fifth Avenue, Sephora, Sundance, Tea Collection, Urban Outfitters and Williams-Sonoma.

The app is more than just a browsing experience. When consumers find an item they’d like to purchase, they can tap to find it in a store nearby or tap “Buy on Website” to visit the merchant online.

Google’s Samat says that “the tablet is the ultimate leanback experience and we see that playing a big role in holiday shopping as a replacement for the mail order catalogs you used to browse through.”

PayPal calls it ‘couch commerce’ and believes that tablet commerce will have a record year. PayPal recently reported that consumers who own both a tablet and a smartphone are significantly more likely (63%) to indicate increased overall spending on mobile purchases, versus owners of smartphones only (29%). Owners of both a tablet and a smartphone buy nearly twice as often as those who only have smartphones and more than 40% of dual owners made more than 20 mobile purchases over the past year, compared to only 12% of smartphone-only owners.

Forrester just released a report predicting a 15 percent increase in online shopping sales this year to nearly $60 billion, partly due to the increase in consumer-use of tablet computers for shopping.

Beyond Black Friday And Cyber Monday

Black Friday and Cyber Monday are historically the top-high-grossing online shopping days during the holiday season. But execs expect to see high volumes of online shopping on other days thanks to an increase in mobile shopping and deals.

Yankovitch tells me that eBay expects revenue numbers to be well over numbers that eBay saw last year for Black Friday and Cyber Monday, but expects to see more activity at times when people aren’t traditionally shopping.

The day of Thanksgiving is one of those days, says Chambers. Because people will have their phone everywhere (including at the table), consumers are expected to make purchases on the fly, especially on Thanksgiving evening. In fact, PayPal is predicting that after dinner on Thanksgiving Day will be the first mobile shopping spike this holiday season.

Another popular day has been the second Sunday in December, which is one of the last days where people feel confident that items will be shipped in times for the holiday. And Chambers says across the board, Sunday is the biggest day for mobile shopping generally.

Deals

There’s no doubt that deals, coupons and discounts will be a large part of the online holiday shopping experience, especially with the current state of the economy. According to the recent Forrester report, 58 percent of Americans say they are more price-conscious today than they were a year ago and nearly half believe they find better values online.

“I really expect consumers to be deal hunting this season,” explains Chambers. She says that PayPal, which has historically offered special deals for the holiday shopping season, will be bulking up on more consumer deals this holiday season.

Samat says that Google has always seen a spike for queries like deals, coupons, and sales during the holiday time and fully expects to see an increase this year. “The consumer desire for a better deal will help give certain product decision tools a big bump,” he explains. “People may take more time this year to find the best possible price.”

Deals could also include lucrative holiday shipping offers. In 2010, 45 of the top 50 online retailers offered some sort of promotional deal between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday, most of which were a type of shipping promotion. And in 2011, Shop.org anticipates that a record 92.5% of online retailers will offer free shipping and not just as a Cyber Monday promotion.

Clearly, there’s plenty of optimism from retailers, and tech companies regarding online spending and shopping this holiday season. And this holiday season is somewhat unique considering the big bet that retailers are making on newer technologies, such as mobile, geo-location, tablets, local product search and more. The big question is how consumers will react to and engage with these technologies over the next several weeks.  It could be a very mobile Christmas.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/13/how-google-ebay-and-paypal-are-gearing-up-for-a-very-mobile-holiday-shopping-season/

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10 Things Entrepreneurs Don’t Learn in College

college

I’ve written before on 10 reasons Parents Should Not Send Their Kids to College and here is also Eight Alternatives to College but it’s occurred to me that the place where college has really hurt me the most was when it came to the real world, real life, how to make money, how to build a business, and then even how to survive when trying to build my business, sell it, and be happy afterwards. Here are the ten things that if I had learned them in college I probably would’ve saved/made millions of extra dollars, not wasted years of my life, and maybe would’ve even saved lives because I would’ve been so smart I would’ve been like an X-Man.

1. How to Program - I spent $100,000 of my own money (via debt, which I paid back in full) majoring in Computer Science. I then went to graduate school in computer science. I then remained in an academic environment for several years doing various computer programming jobs. Finally I hit the real world. I got a job in corporate America. Everyone congratulated me where I worked, “you’re going to the real world,” they said. I was never so happy. I called my friends in NYC, “money is falling from trees here,” they said. I looked for apartments in Hoboken. I looked at my girlfriend with a new feeling of gratefulness—we were going to break up once I moved. I knew it.

In other words, life was going to be great. My mom even told me, “you’re going to shine at your new job.”

Only one problem: when I arrived at the job, after 8 years of learning how to program in an academic environment—I couldn’t program. I won’t get into the details. But I had no clue. I couldn’t even turn on a computer. It was a mess. I think I even ruined people’s lives while trying to do my job. I heard my boss whisper to his boss’s boss, “I don’t know what we’re going to do with him, he has no skills.” And what’s worse is that I was in a cluster of cubicles so everyone around me could hear that whisper also.

So they sent me to two months of remedial programming courses at AT&T in New Jersey. If you’ve never been in an AT&T complex it’s like being a stormtrooper learning how to go to the bathroom in the Death Star where, inconceivably, in six Star Wars movies there is no evidence of any bathrooms. Seriously, you couldn’t find a bathroom in these places. They were mammoth but if you turned down a random corner then, whallah!—there might be an arts & crafts show. The next corner would have a display of patents, like “how to eliminate static on a phone line – 1947″. But I did finally learn how to program.

I know this because I ran into a guy I used to work with ten years ago who works at the same place I used to work at. “Man,” he says, “they still use your code.” And I was like, “really?” “Yeah,” he said, “because its like spaghetti and nobody can figure out how to modify it or even replace it.”

So, everything I dedicated my academic career to was flushed down the toilet. The last time I programmed a computer was 1999. It didn’t work. So I gave up. Goodbye C++. I hope I never see you and your “objects” again.

2. How to Be Betrayed. A girlfriend about 20 years ago wrote in her diary. “I wish James would just die. That would make this so much easier. Whenever I kiss him I’m thinking of X”. Where X was a good friend of mine. Of course I put up with it. We went out for several more months. It’s just a diary, right? She didn’t really mean it! I mean, c’mon. Who would think about someone else when kissing my beautiful face? I confronted her of course. She said, “why would you read through my personal items?” Which was true! Why would I? Don’t have I have any personal items of my own I could read through? Or a good book, for instance, to take up my time and educate myself? Kiss, kiss, kiss.

Why can’t they have a good college course called BETRAYAL 101. I can teach it. Topics we will cover: Betrayal by a business partner, betrayal by investors, betrayal by a girlfriend (I’d bring in a special lecturer to talk about betrayal by men, kind of like how Gwynneth Paltrow does it in Glee), betrayal by children (since they cleverly push the boundaries right at the limit of betrayal and you have to know when to recognize that they’ve stepped over the line, betrayal by friends/family (note to all the friends/family that think I am talking about them, I am not—this is a serious academic proposal about what needs to be taught in college)—you help them, then get betrayed – how to deal with that?

Then there are the more subtle issues of betrayal – self-sabotage. How you can make enough money to live forever and then repeatedly find yourself in soup kitchens, licking envelopes, attending 12 step meetings, taking medications, and finally reaching some sort of spiritual recognition that it all doesn’t matter until the next time you sink even lower. This might be in BETRAYAL 201. Or graduate level studies. I don’t know. Maybe the Department of Defense needs to give me a grant to work on this since that’s who funds much of our education.

3. Oh shoot, I was going to put Self-Sabotage into a third category and not make it a sub-category of How to Be Betrayed. Hmmm, how do I write myself out of this conundrum. College, after all, does teach one how to put ideas into a cohesive “report” that is handed in and graded. Did I form my thesis, argue it correctly, conclude correctly, not diverge into things like “Kim Kardashian will never be the betrayer, only the betrayed.” But this brings me to: Writing. Why can’t college teach people how to actually write. Some of my best friends tell me college taught them how to think. Thinking has a $200,000 price tag apparently and there is no room left over for good writing.

And what is good writing? It’s not an opinion. Or a rant. Or a thesis with logical steps, a deep cavern underneath, beautiful horizons and mountaintops at the top. It’s blood. It’s Carrie-style blood. Where everyone has been fooling you until that exact moment when now, with the psychic power of the written word, you spray pig blood everywhere, at everyone, and most of all you are covered in blood yourself, the same blood that pushed you out of your mother’s womb, until just the act of writing itself is a birth, a separation between the old you and the new you—the you that can no longer take the words back, the words that now must live and breathe and mature and either make something of themselves in life, or remain one of the little blips that reminds us of how small we really are in an infinite universe. [See also, 33 Unusual Tips to Be a Better Writer]

4. Dinner Parties. How come I never learned about dinner parties in college. Sure, there were parties among other people who looked like me and talked like me and thought like me—other college students of my age and rough background. But Dinner Parties as an adult are a whole new beast. There are drinks and snacks beforehand where small talk has to disguise itself as big talk and then there’s the parts where you know that everyone is equally worried about what people think about them but that still doesn’t help at those moments when you talk and you wonder what did people think of me? Nobody cares, you tell yourself, intellectually rifling through pages of self-help blogs in your mind that told you that nobody gives a sh*t about you. But still, why don’t we have a class where there’s Dinner Party after Dinner Party and you learn how to talk at the right moments, say smart things, be quiet at the right moments, learn to excuse yourself during the mingling so you can drift from person to person. Learn how to interrupt a conversation without being rude. Learn how to thank the host so you can be invited to the next party. And so on. Which brings me to:

5. Networking. Did it really take 20 years after I graduated college before someone wrote a book, “Never Eat Alone.” Why didn’t Jesus write that book. Or Plato. Then we might’ve read it in religious school or it would’ve been one of those “big Thinkers” we need to read in college so we can learn how to think. I still don’t know how to network properly so this paragraph is small. I’m classified under the DSM VI as a “social shut-in”. I’d like to get out and be social but when the moment comes, I can only make it out the door about one in ten times. I always say, “I’d love to get together” but then I don’t know how to do it. Perhaps because not one dollar of my $100,000 spent on not learning how to program a computer was also not spent on learning how to network with people. [See also, my recent TechCrunch article, "9 Ways to be a Super-Connector"]

6. Politics. My very first girlfriend, the girl who first laughed hysterically when I showed her a piece of chewing gum I found on the ground that had sculpted itself into the muddy shape of a heart, took me to a movie called “Salvador”. Then there was a discussion group afterwards about how the Contras are bad, or good, I forget, and everyone was nodding and speaking in a Spanish accent. And afterwards my girlfriend was upset, “why aren’t you talking?” Because truth was I was so tired I couldn’t think but nobody ever taught me how to tell the truth so I lied and said, “it moved me so much I’m still absorbing it” and my girlfriend said, “yeah, I can see that.” And nobody ever taught me that there’s more than one acceptable opinion on a college campus.

My roommate for instance would tell me, “Reagan is definitely getting impeached this time.” And I visited his dad’s mansion over Christmas break and he told me all about Trotskyism and the proletariat and I had to work jobs 40 hours a week while taking six courses so I could A) graduate early and B) pay my personal expenses and when I would run into him he had long hair and would nod about how a lot of the college workers (but not the lowest-paid, poorest treated ones—the students who worked) were thinking of unionizing and he was helping with that. “Do you have a job?” I asked and he said, “no time”. And that’s politics in college.

What about the real politics of how people try to backstab you at the corporate workplace or VCs never properly explained the “ratchet” concept to you before they kicked you out of the company and then re-financed. Nobody told me a thing about that in three years of college and two years of graduate school. I wish I would’ve known that for my $100,000.

7. Failure. Goes without saying they don’t teach you this. If you are going to pay $100,000, why would you fail? You might think you were wasting your money if the first mandatory elective you had to take was about failure. About wondering how you were going to feed your family after you got fired when something that was not your fault: Post-Traumatic-Lehman-Stress Syndrome, a common medical condition coming up in the DSM VII.

8. Sales. When I was busy learning how to “not program” nobody ever taught me how to sell what it was I was programming. Or sell myself. Or sell out. Or sell my ideas and turn them into money. Or sell a product to someone who might need it. Or even better, sell it to someone who doesn’t need it. Some business programs might have courses on salesmanship but those are BS because everyone automatically gets As in MBA programs so that the schools can demonstrate what good jobs their students get so they then get more applicants and the scam/cycle continues. But sales: how to demonstrate passion behind an idea you had, you built, you signed up for, so that people are willing to pay hard-earned after-tax money for it, is the number one key to any success and I have never seen it taught (properly) in college.

9. Negotiation. You’ve gotten the idea, you executed, you made the sale and now…what’s the price. What part of your body will be amputated in exchange for infinite wisdom. Will you give up one eye? Or your virility? Because something has to go if you are up against a good negotiator? What? You already thought (like most people without any experience do) that you were already a good negotiator. A good negotiator will skin your back, tattoo it with “SUCKA” and hang it up above the fireplace in his pool house if you don’t know what you are doing. The funny thing is, the best sales people (who are just aiming for people to say “Yes!”) are often the worst negotiators (“it’s very hard to say “No” when you are trying to get people to “Yes”). These are things I wish I had learned in school. I’ve been beaten in negotiations on at least five different occasions, which fortunately became five valuable lessons I’ve learned the hard way, instead of studying examples and being forced to think about it for the $100k in debt I got going to college.

People will say, “well, that’s your experience in college. Mine was very different.” And it’s true. You joined the sororities and learned how to network and dinner party and be political and know everything there is to know about betrayal. My college experience was sadly unique and probably different from everyone else’s so you would be completely right to quote me that inane statistic about how college graduates earn 4% more than high school graduates and are consequently 4% happier .

(Another thing, 10. Happiness. We never learn how it’s a combination of the food we eat, our health, our ability to be creative, our ability to have sound emotional relationships, our ability to find something bigger than ourselves and our egos to give up our spiritual virginity to.)

So I can tell you what I wish I did. I wish I had gone to Soviet Russia, and played chess, and then gone to India and learned yoga and health, and I wish I had gone to South America and volunteered for kids with no arms, and did any number of things. But people then say, “haha! but that cost money.” And they would be right. It would cost less than $100,000+ but would still cost some money. I have no idea how much.

But one of these days when the scars of college go away and I truly learn how to think. I might have better comebacks for these people. Or if I truly learn, I would learn not to care at all.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/12/10-things-entrepreneurs-dont-learn-in-college/

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Looxcie Adds Live Broadcasting To The Menu With The LooxcieLive Public Beta

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In a day and age where we can’t seem to stop broadcasting ourselves to the world, Looxcie has added yet another way to share video clips via mobile. Ladies and gentlemen, I’m proud to introduce you to the LooxcieLive Public Beta app — a live streaming video application that, when paired with the Looxcie or Looxcie 2, lets you broadcast live video hands-free.

Looxcie already has a duo of apps out available across both iOS and Android that let you either use your Looxcie as a standard camcorder, or to continuously record video and capture those special moments after the fact. The LooxcieCam app does just what its title implies — you record video with your Looxcie and the app works as a viewfinder.

LooxcieMoments, on the other hand, adds a little something special. How many times have you been out somewhere and seen something totally shocking or hilarious or plain weird happen and wished that you had gotten it on video? With LooxcieMoments, you can press one button on your Looxcie to save the last 30 seconds of video on your mobile device, while a long-tap shares the clip instantly. Granted, you’ll need to be wearing your Looxcie/Looxcie 2 for that to be possible, but it’s still a neat trick.

Today, the third Looxcie app hits the Android Market allowing users to broadcast video to their friends in real-time, whether it be with family members or a specified group of buddies. I got to play around with a beta version myself and found the app to be pretty snappy and easily navigable.

The interface is simple — you can either view what your friends are broadcasting, broadcast your own video, or add friends with which you’ll eventually share video. The app also features text chat and push-to-talk so that viewers of your broadcast can interact with you as you do your thing. Plus, it’s important to remember that the entire process is theoretically hands-free thanks to Looxcie’s video-capturing Bluetooth headsets, which could let you broadcast some pretty cool activities like skiing or playing sports.

The app saves your broadcasts for 24 hours, just in case someone special wasn’t available to watch it live. The LooxcieLive Public Beta app also integrates Facebook and Twitter, though you can’t simply add friends without them also having a Looxcie account. You can add or remove viewers both before and during a broadcast, and when a friend starts broadcasting you’ll be sent a push notification letting you know there’s something going on. The LooxcieLive Beta app also connects with LooxcieMoments, to let you share snippets with friends rather than full-blown broadcasts.

All in all, I have no complaints about LooxcieLive. It’s simple, fairly straightforward, and takes something as complicated as a live stream and compresses the process into a few simple steps: Turn on your Looxcie, load up LooxcieLive, and press broadcast on the app. Easy as that.

The LooxcieLive Public Beta app is available now from the Android Market, with iOS 5 availability beginning soon.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/14/looxcie-adds-live-broadcasting-to-the-menu-with-the-looxcielive-public-beta/

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Hands-On With The Samsung Captivate Glide For AT&T

Samsung Captivate Glide

You may have already been acquainted with the Samsung Captivate Glide, but it hasn’t quite gotten as much attention as it deserves. Today, that changes. I got the opportunity to get up close and personal with the new Android slider and found it to be a solid little handset for anyone who simply can’t stand touchscreen keyboards.

To refresh, the Samsung Captivate Glide will run on AT&T’s 4G HSPA+ network, and run Android 2.3 Gingerbread. It sports a 4-inch Super AMOLED touchscreen, with a dual-core 1GHz processor under the hood. You’ll find an 8-megapixel flash-enabled shooter on the rear capable of video capture in 1080p, along with a 1.3-megapixel front-facing cam for video chat. It packs 1GB of RAM, 8GB of internal memory with support for a microSD card up to 32GB. Naturally, the Captivate Glide has support for HDMI out, and of course sports a sliding four-row QWERTY keyboard.

Upon first inspection, the Captivate Glide doesn’t necessarily stand out. It’s much like any other Android slider handset you’ve seen before, but with specs that can compete with the likes of the Droid RAZR and HTC Rezound in terms of performance. In fact, if you’re looking at it head-on, the Captivate Glide reminds me a lot of the Samsung Galaxy S II with rounded corners and a very (sorry to say it, Samsung) iPhone-like shape.

Then you pick up the phone and realize its quite a bit thicker (to make room for that QWERTY keyboard, of course) and sports a nice textured finish across the back. It’ll probably pick up more crumbs than your standard plastic back panel, but it’s also more comfortable, offers a better grip, and feels a bit more expensive. The keyboard felt solid, and slid back and forth quite smoothly. The 480×800 display was fine, but it didn’t blow me away like the Super AMOLED Plus display on the SGS II.

The Captivate Glide is actually lighter than it looks, but I still wouldn’t necessarily call it light. And while it shares a few specs with some of the big guns out there, you’re definitely trading in a thin little waist line for that QWERTY sliding keyboard. That is the case with most sliders, and textaholics (who prefer physical keyboards) tend to already know that’s part of the equation, but it’s still worth noting.

All in all the Samsung Captivate Glide is a smart little slider that should offer a solid, strongly spec’d alternative to the keyboard-less candy bars currently dominating the market. Pricing and availability are as yet unannounced.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/14/hands-on-with-the-samsung-captivate-glide-for-att/

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VeriFone Buys European Payments Processing Company Point For Over $1 Billion

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VeriFone is on a bit of an acquisition spree. After purchasingpayments software developer Global Bay, the payments company isacquiring European e-payments giant Point for $820 million. The acquisition is expected to close at the end of 2011. VeriFone will also assume $230 million worth of debt from Point, making the the total transaction volume over $1 billion.

Point, which was sold by private equity group Nordic Capital, is Northern Europe’s largest provider of payment and gateway services for retailers and merchants. Point installations handle 10 million transactions per day, and customers include some of the largest retail companies in Europe, as well as small independent stores and online merchants.

The company’s technology includes point-of-sale technology and support, gateway services, card encryption services, and multi-channel e-commerce processing. Point has more than 800 employees and a local presence in Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Iceland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Sweden and the UK. Currently, Point has 475,000 merchant contracts.

VeriFone plans to expand the Point platform throughout the region and beyond, with the aim of creating the world’s largest infrastructure for rapid deployment of alternative payments.

Douglas G. Bergeron, VeriFone CEO said of the acquisition “Our vision is to offer retailers everywhere a managed service to easily accept all existing payment types, including the evolving alternative and mobile payment methods being offered by Google, PayPal, Groupon, Isis, Visa, MasterCard, and American Express. At the same time, we can increasingly offer the new payment entrants easy and accelerated access to our worldwide installation of more than 20 million merchant lanes.”

Beyond expanding point of sale technologies in Europe, Point is also a money-maker for VeriFone, and expected to bring in $260 million in sales in the next 12 months. VeriFone expects total services revenue to exceed 30 percent of sales in fiscal year 2012, and 50 percent of revenue by fiscal year 2015.

As AllThingsD reported in August, VeriFone is planning to spend $1 billion a year to acquire new technologies to help lead the payments space. While it looks like VeriFone could have reached that number this year, next year’s slew of acquisitions should be interesting.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/14/verifone-buys-european-payments-processing-company-point-for-820-million/

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kickstarter 5

Universal remotes are by and large misnomers. They’re not truly universal. Even that remote from that dumb Adam Sandler movie couldn’t control a HTPC. Universal remotes are often just for traditional AV devices. But not the Bridge from New York-based start-up, Convergence Technologies. This remote concept is a true universal remote with the ability to control everything a HDTV from a cable box to a game system to a digital streamer. But they need your help.

Convergence Technologies is looking for $50k in funding through Kickstarter. The funds will allow the company to develop the necessary software along with building and distributing the remote. As with most Kickstarter project, there’s a bit of risk involved. The device sounds and looks great on paper — if the company can actually build the thing.

What is the Bridge? from Harsh Mody on Vimeo.

The start-up would need to collect (or license) the necessary IR codes for every AV device. The company claims that the Bridge would also be able to control RF devices like the Boxee Box so those codes would need to be found as well. What’s more, the creators state on that they’ll be able to bring this savior of mankind to the market for well less than $100. Still, the dream is big and certainly within reach — as long as they get the necessary funds. That’s where you come in.

Convergence Technologies turned to Kickstarter for help. The site’s crowd funding model allows anyone to throw a few dollars towards the project in return for a bit of swag and a warm fuzzy feeling. The creators are looking for $50,000 and as of this post’s writing, has 47 days to reach that goal. Pledge $10 and it will get you a pin. $20 earns you a t-shirt while $65 gets you one of the first units.

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Zynga Teams Up With Best Buy To Sell FarmVille Collectible Plush Toys

farmville

Rovio’s hit game Angry Birds has made a business out of offering plush toys, and it was only a matter of time before social gaming giant Zynga would get into the market as well. Today, Zynga is announcing a partnership with electronics retailer Best Buy to sell limited-edition toys from the company’s popular game FarmVille at Best Buy locations (and on its retail site) in the U.S.

Best Buy will offer eight exclusive FarmVille collectible plush toys, including a pig, goat, cow, sheep, chicken, duck, horse and rabbit, all dressed in seasonal winter garb, to customers. Pre-orders for the toys begin today with availability in-store beginning November 25.

Each FarmVille plush toy will be available for $9.99, and come with ten free Farm Cash tokens and a digital code that can be used in FarmVille to collect a limited-edition, in-game version of the plush toy. The toys also will be available as part of a game card bundle; you can purchase a $25 Zynga game card and receive one plush toy for for $0.99 cents. Players who collect all eight animals will receive an in-game Super Orchard in FarmVille.

Zynga business development director says that players have been demanding real toys for FarmVille animals for some time now. These are season items of course, so it should be interesting to see if Zynga actually makes this a broader business post-holidays. Rovio is selling 1 million t-shirts and plush toys a month, so this could be a big business for Zynga.

If you want a FarmVille plus toy, you better pre-order one soon. Zynga only made 250,000 toys in all.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/14/zynga-teams-up-with-bestbuy-to-sell-farmville-collectible-plush-toys/

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Formspring Launching A “Favorites” Directory, Starts Looking Like A Real Social Network

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Formspring is launching its first user Directory later today in an effort to better highlight the more popular and famous users of its online social Q&A service. The directory will organize users into categories like Music, Comedy, Sports & Fitness, Fashion & Beauty, Movies & TV, Tech & Start-ups and more.

Current Formspring users will be able to locate the new feature through the “find more friends” section on Formspring when it goes live today, but you can see some of the celebrity users’ pages now, assuming you know their Formspring username. For example, there’s actor Taylor Lautner, producer Jerry Bruckheimer, the bands Incubus, We The Kings, and SOH!3, Marvel Creative Director Tom Brevoort, and pop star Camryn.

At launch, the directory will feature over 100 popular users and more will be added in the weeks ahead. It will also be accessible directly via the URL formspring.me/favorites.

The new feature is meant to compliment the previously launched “Formspring Interests” initiative, which allows users to add up to six interests to their profiles like Music, Sports, Fashion & Beauty, etc. Those “interests” are now mirrored by the categories found within the new Formspring Favorites directory.

The bigger picture here is that Formspring isn’t just launching a directory, it’s taking yet another step on its way to becoming a full-fledged social network. You can see the way the company is carefully and thoughtfully building out links between its users, not only between these new interests and categories, but also through the profile page features “who made you smile” and “who you responded to.”

Formspring’s potential for disruption is that it’s not trying to build another Facebook (cough, Google+,cough), it’s trying to build a network around users’ interests. Of course, do to so, it still has to go up against Facebook’s own interest graph, based on the cumulation of millions of “likes. However, it has one slight advantage: when a Facebook brand page inserts its messaging into your social news feed, it can feel intrusive and annoying. Yet when you venture out to a destination site meant to connect you to brands, celebs, and media personalities, you both expect and desire the same sorts of interactions that may have felt “icky” or bothersome on Facebook. That could be a potential win for Formspring.

Formspring now has 27 million users and sees more than 30 million unique visitors per month. With this new direct access to celeb accounts, it wouldn’t be surprising to see that traffic increase quite a bit in the near future.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/14/formspring-launching-a-favorites-directory-starts-looking-like-a-real-social-network/

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