Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Disney+ tops 50 million paid subscribers globally, 8 million from Disney+ Hotstar India

Disney+ has surpassed 50 million paid subscribers since its launch back in November 2019. An OTT service by The Walt Disney Company, Disney+ recently made it to India via Star India as Disney+ Hotstar. In India, the service has garnered more than 8 million paid subscribers, which is a great deal because there are 30+ options of streaming services to choose from in the country.

Apart from India, Disney+ has also been rolled out to eight European countries including the UK, France, Germany, Spain and more. This has largely helped the service gain more subscribers especially when many countries are going through a period of lockdown due to the Coronavirus outbreak.

“We’re truly humbled that Disney+ is resonating with millions around the globe, and believe this bodes well for our continued expansion throughout Western Europe and into Japan and all of Latin America later this year,” said Kevin Mayer, Chairman of Walt Disney Direct-to-Consumer & International.

Should Netflix be worried?

Disney+ debuted on November 12 in the US, Canada and the Netherlands and was able to amass 10 million subscribers in the next 24 hours. Fast forward to February 2020, CEO Bob Iger revealed that the service had grown to 28.6 million users and now, in April 2020, it has crossed the 50 million milestone.

In comparison, even after being in existence for more than a decade, Netflix was only able to cross the 50 million mark in 2014. It currently boasts of more than 169 million subscribers worldwide and is considered to be one of the most premium OTT services.

While Disney+ is home to titles both old and new from the house of Pixar, Star Wars, Marvel Studios and more, Netflix has doubled down on commissioning original titles, especially in India.

According to a KPMG report, India is slated to have close to 550 million OTT subscribers by 2023 from over 300 million in 2019. An average Indian user spends at least 70 minutes every day on streaming services and with more than 30+ platforms to choose from, people are just spoilt for choices.

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Some AI-enabled streaming cameras are using machine learning to help pet owners detect unusual behavior in their pets, alerting them if the behavior is abnormal (Katie Robertson/New York Times)

Katie Robertson / New York Times:
Some AI-enabled streaming cameras are using machine learning to help pet owners detect unusual behavior in their pets, alerting them if the behavior is abnormal  —  New technology in streaming cameras can flag unusual behavior or suggest why the dog might be barking.



US approves Google request to use segment of US-Asia undersea cable

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on Wednesday approved Google's request to use part of an U.S.-Asia undersea telecommunications cable after the company warned it would face significantly higher prices to carry traffic by other means. https://ift.tt/2XnMknQ

As delivery workers emerge as frontline soldiers, government warms to e-commerce

E-commerce is now limping back to life in India as the border closures, warehouse shutdowns and general confusion that initially accompanied the three-week shutdown order have eased. While still clearing a backlog of previously placed orders, most online retailers are accepting new orders, albeit with delayed deliveries and a limited product catalogue. https://ift.tt/2Vj0kfQ

Google gifts two-months access to Stadia Pro as gamers stay at home

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German foreign ministry restricts use of Zoom over security concerns

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UKMSSB 2020 – Ordinary Grade Medical Officer Marks & Cutoff Marks Released

Uttarakhand Medical Service Selection Board (UKMSSB) has released marks & cutoff marks for the post of Ordinary Grade Medical Officer of (Advt No. 37/2019).

Sources: Microsoft won't be delivering its Windows 10X-powered Surface Neo dual-screen devices this year, nor will it ship Windows 10X to third-party OEMs (Mary Jo Foley/ZDNet)

Mary Jo Foley / ZDNet:
Sources: Microsoft won't be delivering its Windows 10X-powered Surface Neo dual-screen devices this year, nor will it ship Windows 10X to third-party OEMs  —  Microsoft is shifting its Windows focus to reflect the new world where virtualization and single-screen devices are more of a priority than brand-new form factors.



Affordable, fast and 10 other things to know about Apple’s next iPhone

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Covid-19 lockdown: Buying from home leads to surge in e-pharmacy sales

While most brick-and-mortar pharmacies continue to function amid the countrywide lockdown to contain the pandemic, many consumers have switched to buying medicines online for fear of getting infected by the virus https://ift.tt/2VbVLUQ https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Human audio transcribers are growing in demand as AI transcription tech still struggles to parse speech from multiple speakers and grasp context (Steve Lohr/New York Times)

Steve Lohr / New York Times:
Human audio transcribers are growing in demand as AI transcription tech still struggles to parse speech from multiple speakers and grasp context  —  Ellie Leonard's transcription business has thrived, despite the arrival of automated services and advancing A.I. technology.



Commercial real estate could be in big trouble — even after this is all over

Commercial real estate owners, brokers, and landlords have collectively made many hundreds of billions of dollars a year in recent years as the economy zipped along.

Now, they’re getting clobbered by the pandemic-fueled economic crisis. Worse, their industry may be forever changed by it.

To state the obvious, extracting rent from nearly anyone right now is problematic. According to the National Multifamily Housing Council, just 69 percent of U.S. households had paid their rent by April 5 compared with the 81 percent who’d paid by March 5 and the 82 percent who paid by the same time last year.

That statistic will almost assuredly look worse by May 5, given the soaring numbers of both laid-off and furloughed employees.

On the commercial side, the problem is beginning to look as dire. In addition to the countless small retail and restaurant businesses that may be forced to permanently vacate their commercial spaces because they can no long afford them, a growing number of corporate chains is also beginning to prove unwilling or able to pay their rent.

WeWork, for example, has stopped paying rent at some U.S. locations while it tries to renegotiate leases, according to the WSJ, even as the co-working company continues to charge its own tenants.

Staples, Subway and Mattress Firm have also stopped paying rent as a way to muscle building owners into rent reductions, lease amendments and other measures designed to offset the losses they are incurring owing to the impact of coronavirus.

Ch, ch, ch, changes

The question begged is what happens next. While some may see opportunities in distressed assets, it’s very possible that more broadly, the commercial real estate market will never look the same.

For one thing, while small retailers and restaurants melt away, some of their online rivals are gaining ground. Amazon, despite no shortage of bad publicity, gains market share by the day. In fact, it this week again became a trillion-dollar company.

The online streetwear marketplace StockX is also booming, as we reported a few weeks ago. As said its CEO, Scott Cutler, at the time: “We thought we’ve always been a marketplace of scarcity, but now you can’t actually go into a real retail location, so you’re coming to StockX.”

The landscape may change particularly quickly in markets like San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, and New York, where not only is there a density of independent shops and restaurants, but startup employees and other white collar workers are suddenly working from home — and perfecting the art of working as part of a distributed team.

Consider Nelson Chu, the founder and CEO of Cadence, a seed-stage, 17-person securitization platform startup in New York. After recently securing $4 million in funding, Cadence signed a lease last month with a landlord that has agreed to start charging the outfit only when it is able to move into its new uptown digs.

It’s a good deal for Cadence, which doesn’t have to worry about paying for square footage it can’t use.  Nevetheless, Chu notes that being forced to work remotely in the meantime has opened his eyes to the possibility of incorporating more remote work into the startup’s processes, especially thanks to tools like Slack, Google Sheets, and Zoom.

“You always question whether remote work will impact business continuity,” says Chu. “But now that we’re forced to do it, we haven’t skipped a beat. There could be something to be said for having less office space and allowing the people who commute from out of state to not have to be in the office every day. If anything, this now gives us optionality to consider taking on less space” down the road.

It’s easy to imagine that other founders and management teams are coming to the same conclusion. The possibility certainly isn’t lost on real estate companies.

Taking care of business

“Remote work is something we’re thinking a lot about right now,” says Colin Yasukochi, director of research and analysis at the commercial real estate services giant CBRE. “People are right now being forced to do it,” but “I think some will inevitably stick” to working remotely, he says. “The question of how many, and for how long, is unknown.”

Certainly, it’s not the trend CBRE or others in the real estate world were expecting this year. An “outlook” report on 2020 published by CBRE last November sounded understandably rosy. “Barring any unforeseen risks,” it said at the time, “resilient economic activity, strong property fundamentals, low interest rates and the relative attractiveness of real estate as an asset class ” were among the primary factors that supported its prediction that this year would be a “very good year” for commercial real estate.

In the ensuing months, of course, that unforeseen risk has prompted shutdowns that have led to layoffs across nearly every sector of the economy. It has also — by the very nature of it being a viral contagion — made it highly likely that even when people are allowed to re-occupy commercial spaces, they’ll be less enthusiastic about dense workspaces. This is doubly true if they know they can get their work done outside the office.

It could well lead to reduced demand for office space later on. It could also mean the same amount of space — or perhaps even more —  with reconfigured office layouts. No one yet knows, including commercial estate brokers.

Mark George, a San Jose, Calif.-base broker with the commercial real estate company Cresa, is currently working from home, where he shares an office with his wife, who is also working remotely for the first time. It’s nice to be home with their children, says George, but being housebound makes it harder to get a pulse on industry changes, particular in his industry.

Brokers are “somewhat isolated,” he says. ” Touring activity has dried up because we can’t show space. City Hall is closed in every municipality, so you can’t pull permits. The industry is really shut down.”

George said that “deals that were at the finish line probably got signed” before the coronavirus really took hold in the U.S. But the “deals that were close and not quite there? Every deal I’ve seen has been put on ice. Everyone is in a holding pattern.”

A Cresa colleague of George in San Francisco, Brandon Leitner, echoes the sentiment, saying that “things are not moving fast.” Still, Leitner expects the firm, which handles clients as big as Twitter to Series A and even seed-stage companies, will see a deluge of activity once the city’s current stay-in-place mandate is lifted and brokers can start showing companies properties again.

Specifically, Leitner expects the market to come down by “at least 10% and probably 20% to 30%” from where commercial spaces in San Francisco has priced in several years, which is $88 per square foot, according to CBRE. He expects 2 million square feet will come onto the market in the city, space that companies “want to get off their books.”

That’s a lot, particularly given that there is already about 3.2 million square feet of commercial space available already, according to CBRE’s Yasukochi, who says a “good amount” came onto the market in the last six months alone.

Say it ain’t so

Landlords, for their part, are “hesitant right now to put a new number on the market,” says Leitner, so they are likely to “make as many concessions as they can” to hang on to and attract new tenants.

Eventually, however, they may have no choice. There’s only so much they can do, and they typically have debt to deal with, meaning they’ll be relying on their relationships with lenders.

George, the San Jose-based broker, believes lenders will be inclined to help in order to preserve their own investments.

The Federal Reserve may also give the banks the ability to defer mortgage payments, which will make it easier for property owners to put off charging rent.

Whether that will be enough to get the commercial real estate all the way back after Covid-19 remains to be seen.

“This [pandemic] is something we’ve never experienced before,” notes Yasukochi. He says CBRE’s economists estimate the next two quarters will be “very tough.” At the same time, he says, the market “might see a substantial” uptick in the four quarter. “It really depends on whether demand bounces back, and whether expansion plans will be put on hold, or permanently [shelved].”

For now, he’s choosing to remain optimistic, particularly about his home base in San Francisco. It “feels like things go wrong really fast in the Bay Area,” says Yasukochi. “But typically, they come back really fast, too.”

A lot of industry players are counting on it.

Ecommerce giant ropes in cybersecurity experts on spike in app downloads

Cybersecurity experts have noted a sharp increase in concerns over advertising frauds, digital security and company-related sensitive data, among others https://ift.tt/39PFGct https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Govt set to notify new social media norms

Once the guidelines are in place, companies will have to ensure that if unlawful content is going viral on their platforms, others should also take steps to remove it https://ift.tt/3bVm0We https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

ICICI Bank & HDFC Bank lead the pack in digitization: Report

Performances of several high street lenders such as Bank of Baroda, Citi Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Federal Bank were deemed ‘average’ in MeitY's scorecard https://ift.tt/2xhebvb https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Sources: amid the Iran war, Asian bankers say rising power prices and energy security are becoming a bigger consideration in data center financing decisions (Bloomberg)

Bloomberg : Sources: amid the Iran war, Asian bankers say rising power prices and energy security are becoming a bigger consideration in ...