What if the places in your home that have "dead spots" could be injected with WiFi for $39 and a single plug in an outlet. Yes, please. [Currently in Pre-Order]. Link.
As I read this article in TechCrunch about Snapchat, I wondered how interesting it'd be to see the amount of money a service has made selling your attention on a monthly basis in a similar way that we can see how many megabytes of data we've used on our mobile phones monthly (per application and really easily on Android especially).
So, with 150M active monthly users and a target of $300M in revenue for 2016, Snapchat is aiming to sell each user account ad placements of an average of 17 cents a month. That seems really reasonable. I'd pay 17 cents to use it monthly. It's like $2 a year. Sure. But, how much higher can it go? Link.
It's a closed group called Arcade City Austin. 35k people are current members. There are no fixed prices for rides. However, drivers are making roughly what they did before. Fascinating. Link.
Many of you have already clicked & swiped through this a few times and need no introduction. However, not all of you. Mary Meeker presented her Internet Trends Report this week. Read it. All 213 pages. Wait a few days. Read it again. At anytime, hit reply and call out which slides impact your thinking the most and why. Link.
3 Million is the most public estimate of number of Alexa access units sold to-date. Link. Seems really small. You're going to have "voice activated assistants" in your home and then want them in your office sooner than later. If it's not an Amazon device it'll be a Google (Google Home is built on Chromecast not Android?) or an Apple device.
BTW, the Echo Dot (plug it into other speakers) is on backorder. Should ship again in June. Get one and learn. The Amazon Tap (a smaller, portable Echo) requires you to tap a button to talk to Alexa. No thanks.
Interested in trying out Echo's Voice assistant for $5? Try Lexi on iOS. Link. Interested in developing with an Alexa in a browser? Link.
I found this a crisp re-framing of the size of private technology companies. The "Unicorns" (i.e. those with multibillion-dollar valuations) in tech are actually quite small relative to other private companies by revenue. With so much emphasis on the tech firms in media and elsewhere, there is a stark contrast to the quiet behemoth on the shores of Lake Minnetonka. Link.
Take all the applications to Y Combinator and shake them in a data box. Upon reassembling the like pieces, trends emerge. I found this post worth reading. Messaging is going to replace email in the minds of those looking to build services for communications. Link.