Apple

1,000 songs in your pocket

iPod.png

No mention of the engineering.

No mention of the unprecedented memory.

No mention of the fashionable design.

No mention of the price.

Just these six words.

"iPod. 1,000 songs in your pocket."

This is how Steve Jobs introduced this new device on October 23, 2001. A device the would go on to change music, entertainment, and computers forever.

A device up until that point no consumer knew they wanted or even needed.

A device that held the equivalent of 100 CDs in your pocket.

A device that would change our relationship with music and our relationship with entertainment forever.

A device that would change our relationship with hardware and our relationship with companies forever.

The future is psychology and not technology.

The future is experience and not evidence.

Consumers want demeanor, not data.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross is the founder of Caracal Global and specializes in communications for thought leaders working at the intersection of globalization, disruption, and politics.

Tariff Delay, Itlay, Scotland, Singapore, Apple, Spider-Man, AI, HNA

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Tariff Delay, Itlay, Scotland, Singapore, Apple, Spider-Man, AI, HNA

Marc Ross Daily
May 1, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ Trump delays steel tariff decision for EU, other U.S. allies

✔️ Italy’s governing options diminish

✔️ Scotland leads world with start of minimum alcohol pricing

✔️ U.S. weighing Singapore, Korean DMZ for Trump-Kim summit

✔️ Apple is aiming to release an AR/VR headset in 2020

GEOECONOMICS

WSJ: Trump delays steel tariff decision for EU, other U.S. allies

Trump will give Canada, Mexico and the European Union another 30-day reprieve from steel and aluminum tariffs.

Reuters: Benefit of Trump tax cuts overshadowed by technology and misplaced policies: Milken conference speakers

The Milken Institute Global Conference — an annual confab for investors, researchers and policymakers — kicked off Monday in Beverly Hills.

NAFTA: Representatives from Canada, Mexico and the United States agreed to meet May 7 in Washington to resume negotiations for a revised North American Free Trade Agreement.

Italy’s governing options diminish: The two-month search for a new government was thrown into disarray as leaders of the anti-establishment Five Star and the center-left Democratic Party said dialogue was impossible, extending the gridlock in the euro area's third-biggest economy. 

President Trump will be our greatest ally after Brexit: Freed from ties to the EU, Britain can build a truly special relationship with this US president.
The Times - Jacob Rees-Mogg

Scotland leads world with start of minimum alcohol pricing: AFP reports, Scotland on Tuesday became the world's first country to introduce minimum pricing for alcohol, in what its government expects will be a trailblazing move following years of legal battles. "Scotland is the first country in the world being bold enough and brave enough to introduce minimum unit pricing," Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon told AFP.

AFP: Pacific and China on agenda as Macron arrives in Australia

China woos another Taiwan partner, diluting island’s support
: WSJ reports, China established formal relations with the Dominican Republic, peeling away another of Taiwan’s dwindling diplomatic partners as Beijing tries to pressure Taipei to accept Chinese terms for political engagement.

Reuters: Taiwan says China dangled $3 billion to grab ally Dominican Republic

2022
: The year when China is projected to surpass the U.S. as the largest air travel market, according to a International Air Transport Association forecast.

White House considers restricting Chinese researchers over espionage fears: NYT reports, he Trump administration, concerned about China’s growing technological prowess, is considering strict measures to block Chinese citizens from performing sensitive research at American universities and research institutes over fears they may be acquiring intellectual secrets, according to people familiar with the deliberations. The White House is discussing whether to limit the access of Chinese citizens to the United States, including restricting certain types of visas available to them and greatly expanding rules pertaining to Chinese researchers who work on projects with military or intelligence value at American companies and universities. https://nyti.ms/2FuqbI5

Reuters: U.S. Treasury chief: 'Cautiously optimistic' on China trade talks

Bloomberg - Michael Schuman OpEd: In trade talks, China is too clever by half
: As is often the case in China, how things appear on the surface is not actually how they are. That’s especially true with China’s recent market reforms. Beijing isn’t groveling before a tariff-rattling Washington, nor honestly addressing the frustrations of international CEOs. That’s just not how China works. https://bloom.bg/2rcIUCB

Cui's puzzlement: 'Is America still there?': CD reports, Chinese ambassador to the United States Cui Tiankai is puzzled about a country where he has lived and worked for 11 years. "Is the America I used to know -- an open, confident, optimistic America -- still there?" he asked in a speech at Harvard University's Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies on April 17. What perplexes Cui, Beijing's longest-serving ambassador to the US, where he was once a student and UN employee, perhaps also is confounding many others, who are either coming to visit, seeking to study or doing business in the country.

In Beijing they ask, who lost America?!?

U.S. weighing Singapore, Korean DMZ for Trump-Kim summit: WSJ reports, Trump said he was considering Singapore and the demilitarized zone on the Korean Peninsula as the site for his summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un.

AMERICAN POLITICS

NBC News: Kelly thinks he's saving U.S. from disaster, calls Trump 'idiot,' say White House staffers

"Some current and former officials said they expect Kelly to leave by July, and that Trump and Kelly seem to have tired of each other."

LAT: Chief of Staff John Kelly calls ‘BS' on report he called Trump an idiot

Mueller outlined over 40 questions for Trump in
potentialinterview: WSJ reports, special counsel Robert Mueller earlier this year outlined for President Trump’s legal team more than 40 questions he planned to ask as part of his investigation into Trump associates’ ties to Russia.

The House and Senate are out this week.

NYT: Trump’s role in midterm elections roils Republicans

"Congressional and party leaders and even some Trump aides are concerned that the president’s boundless self-assurance about politics will cause him to ignore or undermine their midterm strategy. In battleground states like Arizona, Florida and Nevada, Trump’s proclivity to be a loose cannon could endanger the Republican incumbents and challengers who are already facing ferocious Democratic headwinds."

WP: Democrats were looking at suburban districts. Now they’re glancing toward rural ones too.

"Democrats suggesting that the 2018 field is dramatically larger than anyone could have guessed last year, including in some more rural spots that they once thought of ceding to Republicans."

The lobbying firm CGCN Group emails clients: “Republicans are headed for a tough midterm election … It’s normal that sitting presidents lose many seats in midterm elections … Democratic voters continue to express significantly more interest in the upcoming midterms … enthusiasm gap compounded by the retirements of 46 House Republicans.”

Pompeo dives into NATO diplomacy as allies confront Russia: AP reports, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo rebuked Russia on Friday for what he called aggression beyond its borders, and vowed to restore relevance to a badly demoralized State Department in his new role as the top American diplomat. 

Today: Trump presents the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy to the U.S. Military Academy Football Team.

Trump’s China tariffs risk costing U.S. jobs, new study shows: Bloomberg reports, the tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese imports that Trump has proposed, plus promised retaliatory duties by China, would reduce U.S. gross domestic product by $2.9 billion and cost almost 134,000 U.S. jobs, according to a study commissioned by the Consumer Technology Association and the National Retail Federation, which oppose the tariffs. That includes more than 67,000 jobs in agriculture.

ENTERPRISE

Reuters: Disney to create live sports, entertainment shows for Twitter

Apple
 is aiming to release an AR/VR headset in 2020.

Huawei probe risks bigger shock to smartphone industry: Nikei reports, a ban similar to ZTE's would choke off supplies to the world's third-ranked vendor

Tesla is burning through more than $6,500 a minute.

Tesla has over 300 Chinese startups hot on its tail.

Toyota pushes forward launch of electric vehicle in China.

Reuters: China's HNA drops bid to buy Scaramucci's SkyBridge due to regulatory hold-up

Royal Bank of Scotland
 is to cut around 792 jobs and shutter 162 branches following a review of its branch network in England and Wales.

TRENDS

How much are “free” digital products worth to you? According to surveys of what consumers would have to get to give up various online services by Erik Brynjolfsson, Felix Eggers and Avinash Gannamaneni. Consumers would have to be paid $17,530 per year to give up Internet search, $8,414 for email, $3,648 for maps, $322 for social media and $155 for messaging. The fact they pay nothing suggests they reap substantial “consumer surplus” from these services that does not show up in measured gross domestic product. Of course, consumers may get even more surplus from more mundane non-digital products. How much would you have to be paid to give up indoor plumbing?

The AI arms race: China and US compete to dominate big data: Algorithms trained on mountains of Chinese data may soon be making decisions that deeply affect the lives of people in the US. Beijing plans to be the world leader in the technology by 2030. The contest will come down to who can better manipulate the data. https://on.ft.com/2KtNbdW

Big Data > Big Oil

The world's wealthiest companies are powerhouse data collectors and data users.


The bullshit job phenomenon — are you in one? More than a million people have read David Graeber’s essay arguing that many jobs are pointless. Now he’s expanded his theory into a book. http://bit.ly/2I3Ofqp

"A poll revealed that 37 percent of British workers believe that their job makes no meaningful contribution to the world"

Here's the original essay: On the phenomenon of bullshit jobs: A work rant http://bit.ly/2w52nLg

CULTURE

The spy who came home: Why an expert in counterterrorism became a beat cop. http://bit.ly/2FsJWzL

RIP: Larry Harvey, the founder of the Burning Man festival, has died at the age of 70 after suffering a stroke earlier this month. Harvey kicked off the festival in 1986, when he and about a dozen others burned a wooden man on a San Francisco beach.

SOTD

Friendly Fires - Jump In The Pool http://bit.ly/2jmAo0z

SPORT

A week inside a soccer club when the money runs out: NYT reports, every year, through careless management or reckless ambition, a handful of soccer clubs drift uncomfortably close to collapse. In February, Denmark’s Lyngby B.K. came closer than most. https://nyti.ms/2JKO1lo

AFP: Rangers sack Murty as Gerrard speculation swirls

Champions League - Semi-Finals
:

Today: Real Madrid v Bayern (Aggregate 2-1) 

Wednesday: Roma v Liverpool (Aggregate 2-5)

Xi Jinping, Liu He, Yi Gang, Vladimir Putin, Facebook, Apple || Marc Ross Daily

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Xi Jinping, Liu He, Yi Gang, Vladimir Putin, Facebook, Apple

Marc Ross Daily
March 19, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ With grip on power assured, China’s Xi elevates lieutenants

✔️ Yi Gang named head of People's Bank of China

✔️ Smuggling of US technology is outpacing Cold War levels

✔️ Putin won more than 76% of the vote

✔️ Newly emboldened, Trump says what he really feels

ROSS RANT

How to think about communications + content + commerce and why thought leadership is important

Today the customer is in control.

Full stop.

Just this week, Snapchat, United Airlines, and Toys R Us were discounted, disrupted or defeated because customers took control.

No longer is the seller in control of the sales process, and hard sales are losing effectiveness daily. 

Gone is the day when the seller could show up, make a presentation, offer some price reducing inducements, close the deal, and move on.

So what is a seller to do? 

A seller must think thought leadership.

With so many goods and services available from providers around the planet, this abundance of choice can be a thought leader's differentiator.

Buyers want to be led. 

They want to be informed, guided, and managed in a respected manner that makes them feel like they are part of a special cause bigger than themselves.

Enlightened organizations that embrace thought leadership from the start can develop lasting relationships with customers. Such a relationship which is shaped by forwarding thinking leadership will move a buyer to new thinking, a unique viewpoint, and a new paradigm.

Thought leadership is a choice and is not off is some inaccessible Ivory Tower. 

We all have the power to be thought leaders.

Thought leadership demands merely that we are committed to working with customers and clients in a respectable manner by creating value in every step of the buyer's journey and thinking long-term.

But many of organizations continue to struggle with how to do that and connect in a meaningful manner.

As a first step, organizations must abandon aggressive sales behaviors that buyers are resisting and employing behaviors shaped by thought leadership management.

Working with boardrooms and C-Suite executives from multinational corporations, trade associations, and disruptive startups, I have seen first-hand leaders who do create compelling communications, focused content, and winning commerce are thriving and making a difference.

To harness the power of thought leadership to foster sales in this new environment, employ strategic thinking and thought leader tactics.

Use a strategy that thinks education, experience, entertainment, and easy.

Use tactics that reinforce, reward, recognize, refresh, and supported by research.

GEOECONOMICS

With grip on power assured, China’s Xi elevates lieutenants: Xi, inner circle look to shore up a sluggish economy, eradicate poverty and enhance country’s global standing amid threat of trade war with US. https://goo.gl/xA7VcE

China’s Liu He takes broad economic role as vice-premier: FT reports, powerful portfolio for Xi Jinping lieutenant who cautions against financial risk. https://goo.gl/mPYPG6

Yi Gang named head of People's Bank of China: BBC reports, China has a new Central Bank governor: Yi Gang. Yi, who has been deputy governor for the last decade, succeeds Zhou Xiaochuan and appears to represent more of the same—although he takes over a bank that has expanded powers as of last week. That includes a greater role in devising new laws for the financial and insurance sectors, although China's Central Bank is not independent of the government. https://goo.gl/bJj3N8

NYT: China to name new central bank chief as it seeks continuity amid change

Xi could rule China for decades, says US Pacific commander: AP reports, China’s removal of presidential term limits could see leader Xi Jinping stay in power for decades, the commander of US forces in the Pacific said Thursday. Adm. Harry Harris said he viewed the move as a harbinger of the authoritarian nation’s direction and the strategic threat it poses to America. https://goo.gl/vp6g29

Bloomberg - Editorial: Xi's ambition is a gamble and a challenge to the West: Xi seems out to prove nothing less than that China's model is superior -- not for the time being, not until China's most pressing problems are fixed, but for as far ahead as one can see. Whatever happens, the Chinese president will own the outcome. https://goo.gl/HmSXXY

NYT: Smuggling of US technology is outpacing Cold War levels, experts say

Crypto-criticism: G20 finance ministers: Economist reports, “a Ponzi scheme”, “a will-o’-the-wisp”, “a bubble”. As the prices of the largest crypto-currencies halved in the early months of this year, after a spectacular rise in 2017, regulators made no secret of their qualms. No surprise, then, that crypto-regulation is on the agenda when finance ministers from the world’s 20 largest economies meet in Buenos Aires over the next two days.

Russia votes: Exit polls showed that Vladimir Putin won more than 76% of the vote in Russia’s presidential election.

CNN: Putin tightens grip on power with overwhelming Russian election win

Alarm bells in Tokyo: Bloomberg reports, PM Shinzo Abe apologized in Japan's parliament as a spiraling scandal involving a discounted sale of government land showed new signs of threatening his future when the ruling party leadership comes up for a vote in September.

50 million Facebook profiles harvested for Cambridge Analytica in major data breach: Guardian reports, whistleblower describes how firm linked to former Trump adviser Steve Bannon compiled user data to target American voters.

NYT: How Trump consultants exploited the Facebook data of millions https://goo.gl/VMg7wX

CNBC: Facebook suspends Cambridge Analytica for misuse of user data, which Cambridge denies

NYT: Facebook’s role in data misuse sets off storms on two continents


The “Wild West era” is over for big tech companies: That’s what UK Culture Secretary Matt Hancock has told The Telegraph. https://goo.gl/1o1qzt

AMERICAN POLITICS

What Hope Hicks knows: NY Magazine, the departure of the Trump whisperer has left the White House in even deeper chaos. Which surely pleases some outsiders angling to get back in. https://goo.gl/mDGqzr

Election 2018: An NBC News/WSJ poll suggests the Democrats have a 10-point lead over the Republicans in the run-up to this year's midterms

Why Trump slayed his own masters of the universe: Politico Magazine reports, Trump vowed to bring business acumen to the White House. He just didn’t like it when the ideas came from someone else. https://goo.gl/DG2oCV

"Trump is simply returning to who he's always been, a one-man reality show who prefers to be surrounded by admirers who will praise and fawn over him and confirm that all his instincts are correct and brilliant and certain to succeed. The wonder is that anyone is surprised."

NYT: Newly emboldened, Trump says what he really feels

Federal budget: Lawmakers are expected to introduce a bill today that would fund the government until October at the higher spending levels agreed to last month in a two-year budget deal. The federal government runs out of money on Friday at midnight.

Trade associations to petition Trump administration to halt China-tariff plans: WSJ reports, forty-five trade associations are begging President Donald Trump to steer away from levying tariffs on China, warning that doing so "would trigger a chain reaction of negative consequences for the US economy, provoking retaliation; stifling US agriculture, goods, and services exports; and raising costs for businesses and consumers." Signatories represent the likes of Apple, Google, IBM, Nike and Walmart, among many other concerns. https://goo.gl/pFWnLH

In America, a political coalition in favor of protectionism may be emerging: Economist reports, Trump’s mercantilism is gaining steam. Straight after saying he would slap hefty tariffs on aluminum and steel imports, he is setting his sights on China, a favorite stump-speech bogeyman. This week he blocked the takeover of an American chipmaker by a Singaporean rival, because of fears of Chinese technological leadership. He is poised to act against China over its theft of intellectual property and its trade surplus. https://goo.gl/d8Z4Bq

@DanAnthonyDC: There are nearly 13,000 US tariff lines. *SHOES* alone can fall under 147 classifications that face 37 different tariff rates.Only way for “reciprocal” country/product tariffs is for all countries to eliminate all tariffs.

MBS in WDC: Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman arrives in Washington on a grand tour of the US seeking to burnish his credentials as a decisive reformer to do business with. He’ll meet Trump tomorrow.

ENTERPRISE

NYT: Streaming soon: A fight over AT&T, Time Warner, and the future of TV https://goo.gl/4VDNb8

AT&T and the US Justice Department will face each other in court this week to decide the fate of the telecom company’s $85 billion proposed merger with media company Time Warner.

How can large legacy companies compete with the largest tech companies—Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and so forth—if they can’t scale up through M&A? 

Don’t call it a car: China’s internet giants want to sell you ‘mobile living spaces’: WSJ reports, Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent are betting the auto industry will shift from selling hardware to selling subscriptions to internet-equipped autonomous cars.

UPS's entire central London fleet will soon be made up of electric vehicles, marking the "beginning of the end" of what the company called reliance on the internal combustion engine

FN: JPMorgan claims AI funds played ‘major role’ in market sell-off

Analysts at the US bank think 12 funds played a part in the market volatility last month.

Bloomberg: Apple is secretly developing its own screens for the first time

“The reality is, we’re not a news organization. We’re not there to say, ‘Oh, let’s fact check this.’” -- YouTube's CEO, Susan Wojcicki, is very clear about what her firm is not.

CULTURE

Why Wikipedia works https://goo.gl/VnD9L7

SPORT

NCAA basketball: For the first time since seeding began in 1979, a region will not have a single team left in the Sweet Sixteen who entered the tournament a top-four seed — in the South, No. 1 Virginia, No. 2 Cincinnati, No. 3 Tennessee and No. 4 Arizona all lost.

Villanova and Duke, pick your poison: 538's 2018 March Madness predictions https://goo.gl/2F5VVZ

The University of Connecticut, the top seed in the NCAA Women’s tourney, won their opening round game 140-52 against Saint Francis University. They put up 94 points in the first half.