Category: Business

Amazon to deliver in one hour

Amazon has just launched a new service called Prime Now, which will let Prime members order “tens of thousands” of “daily essentials” for immediate delivery. Once you download the new app (on Android or iOS), you’ll get the option of picking a one- or two-hour delivery between 6AM and midnight, with Uber-like tracking included. The fastest option will run $7.99 per order and two hour deliveries are free for Prime members. The service looks like a response to Google’s same-day Shopping Express launched last year, which offers same day (but not one-hour) delivery at $5 a pop, or $99 a year. Prime Now will operate exclusively in Manhattan to start with, but Amazon has promised that it’ll soon be coming “to a city near you.”

Amazon toyed with taxi deliveries earlier, but said that the Prime Now will be powered by its “growing network of fulfillment centers,” and deliver goods like paper towels, books and toys. The discount online retailer has recently seen its turf invaded by interlopers like Walmart, which has the advantage of bricks-and-mortar stores if you need something now. And if you can’t get out of the house, Google will do the dirty work by picking up items from retailers like Staples and Costco, and delivering them the same day via the aforementioned Shopping Express. Since many of Amazon’s competitors now price-match, that will put it back on par with them for convenience — and it didn’t even need any drones.

For B2B, Omnichannel is not just a buzzword, it means business – Forbes

nearly half of B2B buyers now make work-related purchases on the same websites and mobile apps they use to do their personal shopping.  It is a matter of convenience, habit, and a service the customer has come to understand and trust. We have probably all done it, and we are not alone. Even professional B2B buyers’ expectations have changed dramatically, driven by the simplicity and efficiency of online consumer sites. How people behave as consumers now drives what we expect at work, including how we interact with the manufacturers and distributors who supply businesses.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/brianwalker/2014/12/11/for-b2b-omnichannel-is-not-just-a-buzzword-it-means-business/

Amazon’s Android app has quietly been removed from Google Play

http://www.engadget.com/2014/12/11/amazons-android-app-has-quietly-been-removed-from-google-play/?ncid=rss_truncated

When Amazon updated its primary Android app with an “Apps & Games” section, it was a milestone in third-party distribution: Finally, you could access Amazon’s library of applications without sidestepping Google Play. It didn’t last long — Amazon’s app store mysteriously disappeared from Google Play this week. Well sort of. The URL for the Amazon app’s product page is still active, but it’s no longer searchable from within Google Play. Why the sudden return to the status quo? It’s exactly what you’d expect: Google didn’t like facing competition from within its own app store.

Nanobuds Could Make Almost Anything A Touchscreen

According to the MIT Technology Review, manufacturers have been experimenting with carbon nanotubes to create more flexible touchscreens for some time, but due to poor conductivity and an expensive manufacturing process, the research hasn’t flourished. Canatu’s hybrid film solves the problem of conductivity, and it claims to have found a way to make them cheaply. It has already invested in equipment to make enough film to cover hundreds of thousands of smartphones per month, and in 2015, expects to increase the output to millions.

Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/wearables/canatu-carbon-nanobud-flexible-touch-screen-film/#ixzz3LPjV1fcF
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http://www.digitaltrends.com/wearables/canatu-carbon-nanobud-flexible-touch-screen-film/

Michio Kaku Talks About Coming Breakthroughs

You know you are a nerd when you read the interview twice….in a row.

“I think, in the coming years, we will have a brain pacemaker that can stimulate the memory of people with Alzheimer’s disease. They will be able to upload simple memories of who they are and where they live. Beyond that, we will be able to use electronics to upload vacations we never had, perhaps. And the internet itself will be a brain-net of emotions and memories.

“The 20 century was the century of physics, with computers, lasers, TV, radio, GPS, the internet, etc. Physics, in turn, has made possible that can probe biology. So I think the 21st century will be the century of physics and biology, esp. biology that can be explored via physics. So the future belongs to nanotech, biotech, AI, and quantum physics.”

http://www.businessinsider.com/michio-kaku-talks-about-coming-breakthroughs-2014-3?utm_content=buffered083&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Being connected is more of a good thing than it is a bad thing — Tech News and Analysis

As smartphones and social platforms become more and more ubiquitous, debate continues over whether being connected all the time — even in a small way — is good for us, and that debate is probably never going to be settled. But even though I wrestle with the difficulties of ubiquitous connectivity and the “always on” social web, I believe that the vast majority of us are better off than we were before the internet came along.

What got me thinking about this again was a piece that Scottish novelist Andrew O’Hagen wrote in the New York Times‘ style magazine a few weeks ago, entitled “In Defense of Technology.” In it, the author talks about trying to convince his children that things were better when he was younger, before technology came along. But he admits that his heart isn’t really in it:

https://gigaom.com/2014/11/30/being-connected-is-more-of-a-good-thing-than-it-is-a-bad-thing/