Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Salesforce announces developer productivity tools built for coders working remotely

A new set of developer productivity tools from Salesforce is designed to help coders working remotely build applications more quickly and at scale.

A closer look at Apple's iOS 14 home screen, which finally adds widgets and other features like App Library while retaining the simplicity of iOS (Dieter Bohn/The Verge)

Dieter Bohn / The Verge:
A closer look at Apple's iOS 14 home screen, which finally adds widgets and other features like App Library while retaining the simplicity of iOS  —  Widgets, hideable pages, App Library, and App Clips: a lot of new concepts for one update  —  Eight years ago, I wrote a piece bemoaning …



Apple's product engineering is unprecedented, says this former Windows exec

Commentary: Steven Sinofsky knows what it's like to ship code at scale, which is why he's perfect to call out Apple for "some of the most remarkable product engineering...in history."

E-commerce companies seek time to comply with labelling rule

Companies asked to provide feedback within a fortnight about the modalities after talks with sellers https://ift.tt/2Nt70oc https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Xiaomi Redmi Note 9 Pro Max with 5020mAh battery to go on sale today at Amazon

Chinese technology company Xiaomi is set to make its Redmi Note 9 Pro Max smartphone available for sale today. Interested customers can buy the smartphone from both Amazon and Mi.com at 12 pm. https://ift.tt/2Z2ofSO

Twitter Hides 'Abusive' Trump Tweet Targeting Protestors

Twitter on Tuesday hid a tweet from President Donald Trump in which he threatened to use "serious force" against protestors in the US capital, saying it broke rules over abusive content. https://ift.tt/3fP50CU

Hong Kong fintech Qupital partners with eBay to provide financing for sellers

Qupital, a trade financing platform, announced today that it will partner with eBay as one of its officially recommended Hong Kong financing service providers. In today’s announcement, Qupital said it will provide offshore financing services, including working capital, to eBay sellers in China through QiaoYiDai, its main product.

The agreement with eBay means Qupital will be able to monitor the real-time data of eBay sellers who apply for their services, which the fintech startup says will enable it to assess credit applications within three days, on average, and settle drawdown requests in less than a day.

Founded in 2016 and based in Hong Kong, Qupital raised a $15 million Series A last year led by strategic investor CreditEase FinTech Investment Fund, with participation from Alibaba Hong Kong Entrepreneurs Fund and MindWorks Ventures.

Qupital is one of a growing roster of fintech companies in Asia—Aspire and First Circle are a couple other examples—that provide loans, credit lines and services to online sellers, SMBs and other businesses who often have trouble obtaining working capital from traditional lenders like banks.

Instead of relying on financial statements, these companies use data analytics to assess creditworthiness. In QiaoYiDai’s case, this means looking at “e-commerce statistics and big data, including the credibility of [applicants’] online shops, historical transaction data, rating data, refund and exchange rates of goods, among a plethora of other data points,” Qupital said in its announcement.

On average, Qiaoyidai provides an average credit limit of $150,000, with a maximum credit line of up to $1.5 million for qualifying sellers.

More e-commerce vendors in China are turning to social media as their main channels for reaching buyers (for example, Alibaba has partnerships with Weibo and Douyin and rival JD.com recently struck a strategic partnership with Kuaishou, while TikTok began testing social commerce last year), and having quick, integrated access to financing tools may convince vendors to stick with legacy e-commerce platforms like eBay, especially for cross-border sellers.

After WWDC, the performance of Apple's silicon chips for Mac remains a mystery, with speed and efficiency claims not yet substantiated through benchmarks (Sean Hollister/The Verge)

Sean Hollister / The Verge:
After WWDC, the performance of Apple's silicon chips for Mac remains a mystery, with speed and efficiency claims not yet substantiated through benchmarks  —  There were canned demos but no benchmarks or comparisons  —  For years, Apple has steadily revealed how the ARM-based chips …



What the new iOS 14 means for iPhone users: 9 key features

https://ift.tt/2CBfmrP

Indonesian ride-hailing firm Gojek cuts 9% of headcount

Gojek is closing down its lifestyle services arm GoLife, which is expected to have a knock-on impact on contractors providing services to the division, which numbered around 60,000 in 2019. https://ift.tt/3hRNsYR https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Amazon pledges $2 billion venture capital fund to invest in clean energy

The Climate Pledge Fund will invest in companies across industries such as transportation and logistics, energy, storage and utilization, manufacturing and materials, and food and agriculture https://ift.tt/2CB0U32 https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

New FDI rules may cloud Ant's investment in Zomato

Evaluating if the pending $100 million investment from China's Ant Financial needs govt nod, says investor Info Edge https://ift.tt/3dzF2C4 https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Slow clearance of Chinese goods may put e-tail in a spot

Govt move could put at risk categories that contribute over 50% of sales on e-platforms https://ift.tt/2Vc9UC9 https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Online sales doubles for top consumer brands in India due to Covid-19

Senior executives said several consumers continue to buy online rather than venturing into stores for fear of catching the infection, while several brick-and-mortar stores are still shut due to liquidity issues. https://ift.tt/3fPF8a2 https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

AngelList’s ‘Carta for India’ product helps startups manage cap table and employee grants for free

AngelList, a platform that helps startup founders discover and connect to angel investors and job seekers, on Wednesday branched out to a new category in India to further serve the ecosystem.

The startup platform said its new product, called EquityList, allows founders to easily manage their cap table, which as the name suggests, is a table that documents a firm’s percentages of ownership, value of equity in each round, and equity dilution.

AngelList’s new offering pits it against the talk-of-the-town Carta’s core service — though by limiting EquityList to India, AngelList is tapping a booming market that the Palo Alto-based startup is yet to explore.

By targeting India, AngelList is also ploughing through a field that is vast but doesn’t have as many challengers. Most startups in India currently rely on lawyers, papers, and Microsoft Excel to manage their cap tables.

EquityList also enables startup founders to manage equity they are granting to employees. The tool, which allows the grant letter to generate and deliver in a single-click, also enables startup employees to accept the grant, view its value, and make use of it, explained Sumukh Sridhara, who oversees product and engineering at AngelList India, in an interview.

“It’s actually cumbersome to keep track of the numbers in Excel,” said Rajan Bajaj, founder and chief executive of SlicePay, a Bangalore-based startup that offers payment cards with pre-approved credit lines for students, gig-workers, freelancers and startup employees.

“Equity of a startup is perhaps the fastest growing asset in the world and it makes sense to manage it with a digital ledger like your stock broking account,” he said.

Utsav Somani, who oversees AngelList’s India operations, said the platform is making EquityList available to startups at no charge. In an interview with TechCrunch, he said EquityList will help startups save countless hours and capital that currently goes into legal documentations.

“Several Indian startups have become unicorns over the years and many more are moving to join the list. But employees at these startups don’t really know what’s the worth of their paper stake, and what they can do about it,” he said. “Employees need to feel that they are valuable. In the U.S. and other markets with more mature startup ecosystems, employees are up to speed on these matters.”

During its pre-beta days, 20 startups ranging from pre-Seed to Series B used EquityList and the early reception was overwhelming, said AngelList, adding that startups using EquityList don’t share any data with the platform.

Misbah Ashraf, co-founder and chief executive of Marsplay, a New Delhi-based startup that operates a social app where influencers showcase beauty and apparel content to sell to consumers, agreed. “There is a lack of transparency everywhere with stock options and how ESOPs’ (Employee Stock Option Plans) value is changing,” he said.

Miten Sampat, chief strategy officer at Times Internet, said it was only logical that AngelList looked into this category, and that it was high time that more firms addressed these challenges. AngelList is also well-positioned to scale this in the market, he said.

A venture capitalist, who did not wish to be identified, said he wasn’t surprised that AngelList was making EquityList free. “They want to be the system of record, a standard for the market. They want startups, and other venture capitalist funds to use EquityList,” he said.

Somani agrees. He said EquityList would enable AngelList, which launched in the nation a year and a half ago, to gain trust and credibility with startups and other players in the ecosystem.

Another venture capitalist who also spoke on the condition of anonymity as he did not wish to upset others said that while EquityList appears to be replicating ‘Carta for India’ and address real challenges but that India was not that big of a market — which would explain why Carta has no play here.

“India is a big and wide-open market,” said Somani, who launched his micro VC fund last month. He added that AngelList would eventually expand EquityList to other markets.

Times Internet’s Sampat said EquityList also paves way for AngelList to perhaps explore becoming a secondary private market for startups one day. Somani did not rule out the possibility, but said there are enough regulatory hurdles to work out first.

Anthropic cuts its list of unauthorized secondary market sellers from eight to four after the initial notice caused panic and pushback from investors (Yazhou Sun/Bloomberg)

Yazhou Sun / Bloomberg : Anthropic cuts its list of unauthorized secondary market sellers from eight to four after the initial notice cau...