miércoles, 11 de enero de 2017

FarmLogs raises $22 million, Instagram Stories hits 150 million daily users, Google closes its UAV project and JetBlue gives us free Wi-Fi.

All this on Crunch Report.


FarmLogs raises $22 million to make agriculture a more predictable business

Ann Arbor, Michigan-based FarmLogs has raised $22 million in a Series C round of funding for technology that helps farmers monitor and measure their crops, predict profits, manage risks from weather and pests and more. Naspers Ventures led the round, joined by the company’s earlier backers Drive Capital, Huron River Ventures, Hyde Park Venture Partners,SV Angel and individual investors including Y Combinator president Sam Altman.
According to CEO and co-founder of FarmLogs Jesse Vollmar, the company has invested heavily in satellite imagery and data since it graduated from the Y Combinator accelerator in 2012. It develops predictive models on top of that raw data to help farmers “program” their fields, Vollmar says.
“We analyze fields all around the U.S. all season long. We can highlight and alert farms when we see a problem developing, and send them out to examine and fix things they never would have caught on the ground. It’s all thanks to a multi-year history of performance satellite imagery,” he explained.
In one recent case, FarmLogs was able to help farmers who knew their neighbors were experiencing grasshopper infestations to pinpoint the bugs in their own massive operation, and stop the pests from spreading. In another typical case, FarmLogs users can see if an irrigation system has stopped working properly and part of their field is over- or under-watered, then go out and fix the system before washing away expensive inputs, like fertilizers or organic pesticides.
Vollmar grew up in a farming community and working for the family business, an organic corn farm. His company has focused on row crops, including corn and soybeans, which make up the bulk of agricultural production in the U.S. Vollmar said farmers like the company’s mobile app and website because it gives them access to data science without having to buy and install a bunch of new high-tech gear in their fields. FarmLogs works with all matter of data gathered from the farm equipment that agronomists do use, however, including tractors and other heavy equipment built by John Deere, Holland, Case Corporation and others.
FarmLogs, which employs about 70 full-time, plans to use the new round of capital for further hiring, and to make its technology known to even more row-crop farmers. With the funding round, Naspers Ventures’ head of U.S. investments, Mike Katz, will join FarmLogs board of directors.
The company’s main competition comes from Monsanto-owned Climate Corp. and its Climate FieldView application.

JetBlue completes its rollout of Fly-Fi, with free high-speed

 Wi-Fi on all planes

 JetBlue today announced that it has officially completed its fleet-wide rollout of Fly-Fi, bringing free wireless internet to all of its planes. The carrier first introduced the service in late 2013, bringing speeds of around 12 to 15Mbps — far surprising the wireless offerings available on other domestic flights at the time.
Along with installation on all of its planes, JetBlue has also been adding in-flight streaming service partners, including Amazon Video, part of a partnership between the two companies that lets non-Prime members shop through Amazon’s offerings, while Prime members get access to the usual content. A pretty good way for Amazon to get its hands on a captive audience.
The Wi-Fi offering also gives users the ability to stay connected from the gate to the plane, and vice versa — doing away with the standard airline cruising altitude requirement to fire up the wireless service. It’s night and day from the sluggish and pricey options offered by airlines that rely on third-party services like Gogo, where in-flight passes often cost around $19.
As the carrier also handily notes, it also helped pioneer the now-standard back-of-the-seat TV sets in domestic airlines.

Instagram Stories hits 150M daily users, launches skippable ads

Instagram Stories now has as many users as the last number announced by Snapchat, the app Instagram copied. And it’s swiftly moving to monetize that massive audience. Along with the new 150 million daily user stat, Instagram today announced the launch of ads mixed into Stories. The unclickable five-second photo and 15-second video ads appear between different people’s stories and can be easily skipped. Instagram will also provide business accounts with analytics on the reach, impressions, replies and exits of their Stories.
Monetizing the feature just five months after its August launch might seem premature and could potentially slow its rapid growth. It hit 100 million dailies in October thanks to Stories appearing atop the Instagram feed home screen instead of a different tab or app.
Yet Stories now has the same user count as Instagram’s feed did when it started showing ads in late 2013. It’s just that it took Instagram, now with 600 million monthly and 300 million daily users, three years to get there.
The new Story ads will eventually roll out globally on all interfaces, but will first be tested over the next few weeks with a group of 30 partners, including Capital One, General Motors, Nike and Netflix. Seventy percent of Instagram users already follow a business, and one-third of the most-watched Stories on Instagram were created by businesses, so the company thinks its partners can make ads that won’t bore people into closing the app. They’ll be able to check analytics on their Stories through the Insights button on their profiles.
For now, Stories ads will be sold on a cost-per-1000-impressions basis and priced via auction, with any length of view counting as an impression rather than needing to play for three seconds to be counted as a view (like Facebook videos). Currently there’s no option to click or swipe up to open an advertiser’s website, but Instagram’s VP of business James Quarles tells me “In the future people might want to buy a click or buy a video view and those would be measured differently… We plan to incorporate that in the coming months.”
Users won’t see any signs of the ads until they watch through multiple friends’ Stories in sequence. When the app auto-advances from the end of one friend’s story to the start of another’s, Instagram will sometimes slip in an ad with a “Sponsored” label on it. Just like user posts, ads can be either a photo lasting up to five seconds or a video lasting up to 15. Users either watch the ad to completion before it auto-advances to the next friend’s story, or they can swipe to skip it.
The format, just like the Stories feature itself, is a copy of Snapchat’s Snap Ads. Snapchat’s ads work the same, except that users there have to choose several people’s Stories to watch as a playlist, with ads appearing in between since Snapchat stopped letting you watch all your friends’ Stories in sequence.
Instagram could have waited until later this year when Snapchat is supposed to IPO before showing ads. This would have allowed it to retain the advantage of offering Stories without interruption. But clearly Instagram views the growth of its Stories as strong enough to endure any drop-off in usage that ads cause, and parent company Facebook is eager to see more revenue from its photo acquisition.

As UAV internet proves too complex, Alphabet shifts the Titan team to Projects Loon and Wing

When Google picked up Titan Aerospace in April 2014, the sky was, as they say, the limit. The high-flying drone producer seemingly had a lot to offer the tech giant, including the potential to expand Project Loon, its balloon-based plan to develop low-cost internet access to remote rural areas.
The UAV maker, which was reportedly also being courted by Facebook around the same time, also had the potential to deliver high quality, real-time imagery to Google Maps and assist with disaster relief, the company said at the time.
In early 2015, Google head Sundar Pichai announced that the company was set to begin its first test flights with Titan late that same year. The division has since moved around a bit under the Google/Alphabet umbrella, eventually winding up in the company’s experimental X division, the department devoted to so-called moonshots.
Now, as 9to5Google notes, the Titan division has been shut down by the company, with its employees being reassigned to different Alphabet teams, including Projects Loon and Wing, a team dedicated to cracking drone-based deliveries.
As far as the decision to shut down Titan is concerned, the company notes that it shifted its exploration of drone-based internet shortly after folding Titan into X, instead opting to shift the project’s focus to the more successful pursuit of Project Loon’s balloon-based internet model.
The company has since confirmed the move with TechCrunch, with an X spokesperson issuing the following statement,
The team from Titan was brought into X in late 2015. We ended our exploration of high altitude UAVs for internet access shortly after. By comparison, at this stage the economics and technical feasibility of Project Loon present a much more promising way to connect rural and remote parts of the world. Many people from the Titan team are now using their expertise as part of other high flying projects at X, including Loon and Project Wing.

SEE TOO IN

sábado, 7 de enero de 2017

CES Las Vegas




In just three years, we expect more than 50 billion intelligent things connected to the cloud. Intel is uniquely positioned to power every segment of this smarter future—from creating new devices to enabling a 5G network—and CES is where we unveil the technologies that will make it all possible.




CES Unveiled Las Vegas is the official media event of CES, welcoming press and industry analysts from more 150 countries and taking place two days before the start of CES.


Whether you're an innovative startup or an established global brand, this event is your chance to get ahead of the game, stand out from the show buzz and break your news early to journalists there specifically to tout the best that CES has to offer.


This annual press event draws more than 1,500 influential media from around the world and will feature the CES 2017 Best of Innovation Awards Honorees and tabletop displays from more than 100 local and global tech companies.

Schedule Session 1


Session 1

https://youtu.be/xleLfoufIfw

Session 2

https://youtu.be/q-Ug1sx9c-8


Current Exhibitors

10-Vins
2breathe Technologies Ltd
3dRudder
42tea


Ability3D
AcousticSheep
ActivBody Inc.
Advanced Micro Devices
Aira
Akoustic Arts
Alarm.com
Amped Wireless
Apira Science Inc.
Arovia Inc.

Aryballe Technologies
Ashley Chloe Inc.
Beijing ANTVR Technoloy Co., LTD
Belkin
BenjiLock
BewellConnect
Bitdefender
Blink
Bloomlife
Blue Frog, The Robot Company
BlueBeep SAS
Bluemint Labs

Brydge
Carrier Corp.
Case Western Reserve University
Catspad
Cerevo USA LLC
Cocoon - Home Security
Cognitive Systems
Corentium
Cosmo Connected
Coway Co., Ltd.
C-way®
Dell Inc.
DigiSense
DJI

D-Link Systems Inc.
EarlySense
Elancyl Laboratoire
Eli Electric Vehicles
Emotech, Ltd.
Enerbee
Energysquare
Enlaps
equisense
Escort / Cobra / WASPcam
EyeQue Corp.
Fasetto
Fenotek
FINsix Corporation
First Alert
Fossil Group
FOVE
GDU Technology Company
GIROPTIC
HairMax
Hanwha Techwin America
HAP2U
HiMirror, Smart Beauty Mirror
Holi
HumanEyes Technologies Ltd.
HYDRAO - Smart & Blue
HyperX, A Division Of Kingston
iDevices
Immersive Robotics (IMR)
Immotor
In&motion
InBody Co., Ltd.
Interlogix
iPowerUp
ivSystems Ltd.
Jagger & Lewis
JOY
Kado
Kingston Technology
Klaxoon
Kolibree
Kuzzle
KYON Technologies
La Cool Co.
Legrand
Leka Inc.
Lemon Technology Inc.
Lenovo
Leti
LG
Liberty Mutual Insurance
Linkplay Technology

Linksys (a Belkin International company)
Living In Digital Times
LIZN ApS
LoveBox.love
Luke Roberts
Luraco Technologies Inc.
Lutron Electronics Co., Inc.
Mangoslab
MAXIMUS