Sunday, February 23, 2020

Black Shark 3 spotted on 3C Certification Site, tips 65W Fast Charging

The next Black Shark gaming smartphone is on its way. The Black Shark 3 has been spotted on 3C certification site in China. According to the listing, the Black Shark 2 successor will have support for 65W fast charging. The listing does not reveal much about the upcoming gaming phone. As of now, Realme X50 Pro 5G is the only handset to have been officially confirmed to support 65W fast charging. 

A screenshot of 3C certification of the Black Shark 3 gaming phone was shared on Slashleaks. The listing suggests that it will support 5G. The handset is listed with model numbers Shark MBU-A0 and Shark KLE-A0. As mentioned before, the listing also says that Black Shark 3 will have support for 65W fast charging. Moreover, Black Shark recently announced its partnership with Tencent Games, which is popular for creating games like PUBG Mobile. The partnership may bring hardware and software optimisations on the next gaming phone from Black Shark.

Further, Black Shark CEO Luo Yuzhou was seen taking a poll on Weibo regarding the best charging combination for a 5G gaming phone. Most fans selected the 5000mAh with a 65W charging combination. It is said to allow the phone to fully charge in 38 minutes. 

Earlier, the Black Shark 3 5G was certified by MIIT, a Chinese certification website. In the certification, it revealed that the phone could possess 16GB of RAM. Theoretically, it should be the world's first phone with 16GB RAM. However, we should wait for the official announcement.

https://ift.tt/2VrTWF5

E-payments industry counts the costs after zero MDR jolt

Its growing popularity has benefited home-grown startups such as Paytm and PhonePe (now owned by Flipkart) and global players like Google Pay. https://ift.tt/2uopCjk https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Realme X50 Pro 5G to be launched in India today: Live stream, specs, and more

Realme is all set to introduce its first 5G phone. The Realme X50 Pro 5G was supposed to be launched at an event in MWC 2020. However, after the cancellation of the event, Realme announced that it will be launching the handset in India on February 24. The Realme X50 Pro 5G is said to be priced around Rs 50,000 ($696) in India. The smartphone will be launched in New Delhi, and in Madrid through an online event. Even though 5G connectivity isn’t available in India as yet, it isn’t stopping companies from releasing their 5G devices in the country. 

The Realme X50 Pro 5G event will start at 2:30 PM. It will be live-streamed on Realme's official YouTube channel. Readers can check the launch updates on the official Realme Mobiles Twitter handle and the Realme event site. You can also watch the live stream below:

The Realme X50 Pro 5G is tipped to be the first phone from the company to cross the Rs 40,000 price boundary. It will sport a dual punch-hole notch with a 32MP selfie shooter. The device will be powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 SoC. Moreover, the phone will offer (NSA+SA) 5G connectivity. It will feature a super AMOLED display with support for 90Hz refresh rate.

On the optics front, the Realme X50 Pro 5G will pack a quad rear camera setup with a 64MP primary sensor. It will support a 20x hybrid zoom. The handset is teased to support 65W SuperDart fast charging technology. It may be made available in Rust Red and Moss Green colour options.

https://ift.tt/2Pjez2m

Lightspeed leads Laiye’s $42M round to bet on Chinese enterprise IT

Laiye, a Chinese startup that offers robotic process automation services to several major tech firms in the nation and government agencies, has raised $42 million in a new funding round as it looks to scale its business.

The new financing round, Series C, was co-led by Lightspeed Venture Partners and Lightspeed China Partners. Cathay Innovation, which led the startup’s Series B+ round and Wu Capital, which led the Series B round, also participated in the new round.

China has been the hub for some of the cheapest labor in the world. But in recent years, a number of companies and government agencies have started to improve their efficiency with the help of technology.

That’s where Laiye comes into play. Robotic process automation (RPA) allows software to mimic several human behaviors such as keyboard strokes and mouse clicks.

“For instance, a number of banks did not previously offer APIs, so humans had to sign in and fetch the data and then feed it into some other software. Processes like these could be automated by our platform,” said Arvid Wang, co-founder and co-chief executive of Laiye, in an interview with TechCrunch.

The four-and-a-half-year-old startup, which has raised more than $100 million to date, will use the fresh capital to hire talent from across the globe and expand its services. “We believe robotic process automation will achieve its full potential when it combines AI and the best human talent,” he said.

Laiye’s announcement today comes as the market for robotic automation process is still in nascent stage in China. There are a handful of startups looking into this space, but Laiye, which counts Microsoft as an investor, and Sequoia-backed UiPath are the two clear leaders in the market currently.

As my colleague Rita Liao wrote last year, it was only recently that some entrepreneurs and investors in China started to shift their attention from consumer-facing products to business applications.

Globally, RPA has emerged as the fastest growing market in enterprise space. A Gartner report found last year that RPA market grew over 63% in 2018. Recent surveys have shown that most enterprises in China today are also showing interest in enhancing their RPA projects and AI capabilities.

Laiye today has more than 200 partners and more than 200,000 developers have registered to use its multilingual UiBot RPA platform. UiBot enables integration with Laiye’s native and third-party AI capabilities such as natural language processing, optical character recognition, computer vision, chatbot and machine learning.

“We are very bullish on China, and the opportunities there are massive,” said Lightspeed partner Amy Wu in an interview. “Laiye is doing phenomenally there, and with this new fundraise, they can look to expand globally,” she said.

Tests find Facebook's Download Your Information tool gives users an incomplete and inconsistent list of advertisers who have uploaded their data to Facebook (Privacy International)

Privacy International:
Tests find Facebook's Download Your Information tool gives users an incomplete and inconsistent list of advertisers who have uploaded their data to Facebook  —  In 2018, following the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook announced the “Download Your Information” feature allowing users …



Netflix introduces offer for new users: Pay just Rs 5 for the first month

An obvious attempt to entice new users into taking out a subscription, Netflix, rolled out this plan to some users on February 21. https://ift.tt/2uncgnp https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Govt 'ban’ on new engineering colleges for 2 years

https://ift.tt/37PmUB3

TCS, Infosys plan to expand 'skilling' programmes: 9 things to know

https://ift.tt/32mjxAH

What happens if a pandemic hits?

What happens if a Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic hits? It’s time to at least start asking that question. What will the repercussions be, if the virus spreads worldwide? How will it change how we live, work, socialize, and travel?

Don’t get all disaster-movie here. Some people seem to have the notion that a pandemic will mean shutting down borders, building walls, canceling all air travel, and quarantining entire nations, indefinitely. That is entirely incorrect. Containment attempts can slow down an outbreak and buy time to prepare, but if a pandemic hits, by definition, containment has failed, and further attempts will be pointless if not counterproductive. Rather:

The focus will switch from containment to mitigation, i.e. slowing down how fast the virus spreads through a population in which it has taken root. Mitigation can occur via individual measures, such as frequent hand washing, and collective measures, such as “social distancing” — cancellations of mass events, closures, adopting remote work and remote education wherever possible, and so forth.

The slower the pandemic moves, the smoother the demands on health-care systems will be; the less risk those systems will have of becoming overloaded; the more they can learn about how best to treat the virus; and the greater the number of people who may ultimately benefit from a vaccine, if one is developed. I recommend the whole thread above this instructive graph:

An important question for those of us in the media is: how do we report on Covid-19, in this time of great flux and uncertainty? Let me direct you to this excellent Scientific American piece by Harvard’s Bill Hanage and Marc Lipsitch: “How to Report on the COVID-19 Outbreak Responsibly.” (Disclosure / disclaimer; Bill is a personal friend.)

We think reporting should distinguish between at least three levels of information: (A) what we know is true; (B) what we think is true—fact-based assessments that also depend on inference, extrapolation or educated interpretation of facts that reflect an individual’s view of what is most likely to be going on; and (C) opinions and speculation […] facts about this epidemic that have lasted a few days are far more reliable than the latest “facts” that have just come out, which may be erroneous or unrepresentative and thus misleading. […] Distinguish between whether something ever happens and whether it is happening at a frequency that matters.

Read the whole thing. As an opinion columnist, I’m on pretty safe ground, in that everything I write is definitionally C) in the above taxonomy … but basically everything I’m citing counts as B).

Which includes the following statement: when I say “if a” in the first paragraph above, I really mean “when the.” A pandemic is coming; the question is at what scale. I recognize that may sound like irresponsible doomsaying. I strongly encourage you to be skeptical, to read widely, and to draw your own conclusions. But the clamor of expert voices is growing too loud for me to ignore. Here’s an entire Twitter thread linking to epidemiologists at Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and the Universities of Basel and Bern, saying so with very little ambiguity:

Don’t panic. There is a great deal we can and will do to limit and mitigate this pandemic. It’s all too easy to imagine fear becoming far more dangerous than the virus itself. Don’t let that happen. It’s also worth noting that its mortality rate is likely significantly lower than the headline 2%, not least because that doesn’t include mild undiagnosed cases:

Furthermore, the rate seems much lower yet for anyone under 60 years old, and enormously lower for anyone under 50. Some more context regarding mitigation:

Unless all of those people cited above are wrong, which seems unlikely, we will all spend the next weeks and months sharing the very strange collective experience of watching — through our laptops and phones, through Twitter and the mass media — the spread of this pandemic through much of the world in what will seem like slow motion. Our day-to-day lives are ultimately likely to change somewhat. (If your office job isn’t remote-work-friendly today, I assure you, it will be this time next year.) But it will be very far from the end of the world. I suspect we’ll all be surprised by how soon it begins to feel almost normal.

BharatPe raises $75M to help Indian merchants accept digital payments and secure working capital

BharatPe, a New Delhi-based startup that is enabling hundreds of thousands of merchants to accept digital payments for the first time and also providing them with access to working capital, has raised $75 million in a new financing round as it looks to scale its business in the nation.

The Series C round for the one-and-a-half-year-old startup was led by New York-headquartered hedge fund Coatue Management and existing investor Palo Alto-based fintech investor Ribbit Capital.

VC firm Amplo, and existing investors Steadview Capital and Insight Partners also participated in the round, which valued the startup at over $400 million. BharatPe has raised $140 million to date.

BharatPe operates an eponymous service to help offline merchants accept digital payments. Even as India has already emerged as the second largest internet market, with more than 500 million users, much of the country remains offline. Among those outside of the reach of the internet are merchants running small businesses, such as roadside tea stalls.

To make these merchants comfortable with accepting digital payments, BharatPe relies on QR codes that support government-backed UPI payments infrastructure. Ashneer Grover, co-founder and chief executive of BharatPe, said the startup will use much of the fresh capital to fund working capital for its merchant partners.

BharatPe, he said, has disbursed about $14 million “short-term” loans to over 20,000 merchants in the last seven months. New merchants can secure about $500 for a period of three months from BharatPe. As merchants spend more time on BharatPe, the firm increases the amount to about $2,000.

The startup has amassed over 3 million merchants in 30 Indian cities. It aims to more than double that number by March 2021.

The lending business is crucial to BharatPe. Payment apps make little to no money through making transactions on their platforms. Those processing UPI payments can not even charge a small commission to merchants. Additionally, access to working capital is a major challenge in developed markets such as India. According to a World Bank report, more than 2 billion people globally do not have access to working capital.

Scores of new and established players today are offering a range of solutions including lending to merchants. Earlier this month, Paytm, the largest fintech startup in India and which raised $1 billion late last year, introduced a stand that displays QR check-out codes that has a built-in calculator, and a USB charger with sound box that delivers confirmation message when a transaction has processed. The startup also unveiled a point-of-sale machine with built-in scanner and printer for merchants.

Paytm founder Vijay Shekhar Sharma reveals road to profitability; may take 2 years to come out of red

Paytm plans to invest around Rs 10,000 cr over the next three years to expand financial services. https://ift.tt/2SSA6Rt https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Realme X50 Pro 5G Launch in India Today: Everything You Need to Know

Realme X50 Pro 5G will be launched today in India. Here's everything you need to know about the live streaming time, expected price of the phone, its specifications, and more https://ift.tt/2vWI8Qg

eMarketer estimates Twitch will have 37.5M monthly active viewers in the US this year and is on pace to surpass the 44M mark by 2022 (Sarah Perez/TechCrunch)

Sarah Perez / TechCrunch:
eMarketer estimates Twitch will have 37.5M monthly active viewers in the US this year and is on pace to surpass the 44M mark by 2022  —  Twitch, the Amazon-owned streaming service for gamers, is poised to surpass 40 million monthly active viewers in the U.S. as of next year, according to a new forecast from eMarketer out on Thursday.



Tim Berners-Lee's Inrupt raised over $10M in 2019 to operationalize Solid, an open source project to decentralize the web and give users control of their data (John Thornhill/Financial Times)

John Thornhill / Financial Times:
Tim Berners-Lee's Inrupt raised over $10M in 2019 to operationalize Solid, an open source project to decentralize the web and give users control of their data  —  Sir Tim Berners-Lee's start-up Inrupt to expand operational team and launch pilot projects  —  Inrupt, the start-up company founded …



Uber says EVs will electrify its India fleet in two years

Ride-hailing app has a fleet of 350 electric vehicles, which will be expanded to 1,500 by year-end https://ift.tt/38XKJrO https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

How Schneider Electric is using AI in call centers and manufacturing to complement employees' work and boost productivity, rather than to replace them (Patricia Cohen/New York Times)

Patricia Cohen / New York Times : How Schneider Electric is using AI in call centers and manufacturing to complement employees' work ...