Saturday, 15 November 2014

Uncertain: Google Glass future clouded

SAN FRANCISCO: After two years of popping up at high-profile events sporting Google Glass, the gadget that transforms eyeglasses into spy-movie worthy technology, Google co-founder Sergey Brin sauntered bare-faced into a Silicon Valley red-carpet event on Sunday.
He had left his pair in the car, Brin told a reporter. The Googler, who heads up the top-secret lab which developed Glass, has hardly given up on the product – he recently wore his pair to the beach.
But Brin’s timing is not propitious, coming as many developers and early Glass users are losing interest in the much-hyped, $1,500 test version of the product: a camera, processor and stamp-sized computer screen mounted to the edge of eyeglass frames. Google Inc itself has pushed back the Glass roll out to the mass market.
While Glass may find some specialised, even lucrative, uses in the workplace, its prospects of becoming a consumer hit in the near future are slim, many developers say.
Plenty of larger developers remain with Glass. The nearly 100 apps on the official website include Facebook and OpenTable, although one major player recently defected: Twitter.
“If there was 200 million Google Glasses sold, it would be a different perspective. There’s no market at this point,” said Tom Frencel, the Chief Executive of Little Guy Games, which put development of a Glass game on hold this year and is looking at other platforms, including the Facebook Inc-owned virtual-reality goggles Oculus Rift.
Google insists it is committed to Glass, with hundreds of engineers and executives working on it.
Glass was the first project to emerge from Google’s X division, the secretive group tasked with developing “moonshot” products such as self-driving cars. Glass and wearable devices overall amount to a new technology, as smartphones once were, that will likely take time to evolve into a product that clicks with consumers.
Meanwhile, after an initial burst of enthusiasm, signs that consumers are giving up on Glass have been building.
Google dubbed the first set of several thousand Glass users as “Explorers.” But as the Explorers hit the streets, they drew stares and jokes. Some people viewed the device, capable of surreptitious video recording, as an obnoxious privacy intrusion, deriding the once-proud Explorers as “Glassholes.”
“It looks super nerdy,” said Shvetank Shah, a Washington, DC-based consultant, whose Google Glass now gathers dust in a drawer. “I’m a card carrying nerd, but this was one card too many.”
Glass now sells on eBay for as little as half list price.
Some developers recently have felt unsupported by investors and, at times, Google itself.

Microsoft introduces app-less Skype

SAN FRANCISCO: Microsoft on Friday released a test version of Skype that lets people make Internet calls from web browsers, eliminating the need to install special applications.
“It’s perfect if you prefer using the web rather than an app: perhaps you’re sitting at a computer that doesn’t already have Skype downloaded,” said Microsoft in a blog post.
“Or maybe you’re on the go and using an Internet cafe or hotel computer whilst on vacation where you can’t download Skype at all.”
Skype for Web will be available to a small number of existing users at first and will be rolled out globally in the coming months, according to Microsoft.
Skype is used every day for more than two billion minutes of voice and video calling on the Internet, said the US technology titan.
Skype was launched in August 2003 by two Scandinavian technology entrepreneurs, Niklas Zennstroem of Sweden and Janus Friis of Denmark, who expanded on existing peer-to-peer networking technologies.
Skype, which allows its online users to make high-quality calls to each other anywhere in the world for free, quickly took off, bringing the world closer together in an age when globalisation and intercontinental travel pulled more families apart than at perhaps any other time in history.
Skype was made available through free applications tailored for computers, smartphones, tablets and smart televisions. US software maker Microsoft bought Skype in 2011 for $8.5 billion and built the service into Xbox One video game consoles.

Tuesday, 11 November 2014

Maersk Ready To Invest In Oil Fields

Chief Executive Nils Smedegaard Andersen made the following comments in a conference call with Danish media:
ABOUT OVERALL DEVELOPMENT:
“We are very pleased with the results. It is better than what we have hoped for and cash flow is so strong we feel further confirmed that we are very well prepared for future competition.”
ABOUT FALLING OIL PRICES:
“In general, in times with tougher competition and pressure on competitors’ earnings, opportunities to buy assets may arise. This could for instance be an oil field. We think it is cheaper to buy oil fields than to undertake exploration. That’s why we have reduced oil exploration. In addition other options could come up such as investment opportunities in ports as we are always looking for.”
maersk-viking
Image for Representation Purpose only; Credits: maerskdrilling.com
“Some oil projects are more challenged than others. Challenged means that we need to talk to government partners and work very closely with suppliers. There is for example the deepwater Chissonga project in Angola. It’s just a fact that there are relatively high production costs and projects like this is challenged by oil price of $80.”
“We only want to go on with the projects if we feel comfortable in having a limited risk and if we are likely to get a reasonable return from investment.”
“We have for some time expected the oil price to go down to $80 to $90 dollar per barrel and it is also a level that we see as reasonable – both for the oil industry and the transportation industry.”
ABOUT MAERSK LINE:
“Our strong earnings in Maersk Line means that we are among those who can continue with a high level of investment – even in difficult times. It means that we can continue to modernise our fleet, invest in more fuel-efficient ships, focus on customer service and focus on the long-term.”
(Reporting by Ole Mikkelsen; editing by Sabina Zawadzki)

Revealed: Cristiano Ronaldo's obscene nickname for Lionel Messi in the Real Madrid dressing room

Revealed: Cristiano Ronaldo's obscene nickname for Lionel Messi in the Real Madrid dressing room
For as long as Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are in competition their relationship will be marked by their battle for the same space, that small, distant space in which the truly greats live. But how do they get on? What do they say to each other when they meet? And when they are not in the spotlight?
At the 2013 Ballon d’Or gala, Ruud Gullit thought he noticed "a strange relationship between Cristiano and Messi; they barely say hello to one another". The relationship, in the presence of others, is cold. It is not bad; it is respectful but distant. They do not hate each other, as some people might believe, say the families of both. Conversation does not usually go beyond "hello, how are you, everything okay?" At public events, Messi is always surrounded by his own crew, or with Xavi and Iniesta, whereas Ronaldo usually shows up on his own, even though mixing with people he does not know intimidates him.
Diego Torres relates an anecdote that confirms the two stars’ diplomacy in his book Prepárense para perder (‘Prepare for Defeat’). It happened at the Ballon d’Or 2012, the day Real Madrid President Florentino Pérez feared for the first time, according to Torres, that Ronaldo could end up at Barcelona.
Andrés Iniesta, Pep Guardiola and Vicente del Bosque were witnesses to the following: "On 7 January 2013, the president found himself in an isolated corner of a hall in the Kongresshaus Zürich, keeping an eye on Messi while he was being interviewed on television. Cristiano suddenly appeared at the other side of the hall. Then, exactly what the president had feared occurred. Messi called him over, Cristiano went, and they hugged just like children. Pérez confessed to his friends that he watched the scene in anguish. He felt danger. He could visualise everything. Cristiano would be free in January 2015 and then any club, Barcelona included, would be able to sign him without negotiating with Real Madrid."
Messi and Ronaldo are not friends but they are polite to one another in public; anything else, those who are close to them insist, is all media-generated.

Messi admires Cristiano’s shooting and heading ability but is tired of comparisons between the two of them. He understands that Ronaldo is not comfortable about it either, and has watched without the slightest pleasure his supposed arch-enemy responding with anger to the public pestering from those who like to see them fighting. Ronaldo, who will take part in a commercial with Leo for the first time to promote the Google Nexus 11 tablet, does not think that they can be compared: "Messi and I are as different as Ferrari and Porsche."
Ronaldo, perhaps as a symptom of the immaturity that marks so many footballers, thinks it necessary to put on a brave face in front of his team-mates, not be scared of Messi and to rise to the challenge. All very macho; all very false.
And that is why, according to some Real Madrid players, CR7 has a nickname for him: ‘motherf----r’; and if he sees someone from the club speaking to Leo, he also ends up being baptised ‘motherf----r’.
Ronaldo's outrageous scoring record by numbers
In that environment, Ronaldo usually compares their relationship with that between the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom. And the Madrid players, with their less than subtle dressing-room sense of humour, have a long list of jokes that include Messi as Ronaldo’s dog or puppet, or kept in a designer handbag belonging to the Portuguese player. And much worse.
Ronaldo fits the Real Madrid business plan and their search forgalácticos. Messi fits the more romantic image that Barcelona portrays. That is why Barça cannot imagine selling their flagship footballer: if the club behaved like a business, Leo would be sold at his peak, when the highest transfer fee could be obtained. If a romantic idea is followed, Messi will not be allowed to leave until he decides to go to Newell’s, on his last legs
.

Monday, 10 November 2014

Chelsea willing to listen to Ramires offers

Chelsea willing to listen to Ramires offers
EXCLUSIVE: The Blues could be prepared to sell the Brazilian as early as January should a replacement be found, with Real Madrid understood to be among those interested
By Wayne Veysey

Chelsea are willing to listen to offers for Ramires and could be prepared to sell him in January.

Jose Mourinho has told Stamford Bridge chiefs that he would be prepared for the Brazilian to leave if a proven midfield replacement can be found.

Spanish clubs, led by Real Madrid, are understood to be monitoring Ramires' situation closely.

The 27-year-old has struggled with injury and poor form this season, starting just three of the team's 16 matches in all competitions.

He has been overlooked in favour of Premier League ever-presents Nemanja Matic and Cesc Fabregas for the central midfield slots and has had to fight with the likes of Eden Hazard, Oscar, Willian and Andre Schurrle for an attacking midfield position.



Ramires's contract expires in 2017 and, if he does not extend next year, Chelsea would regard it as a good time to cash in on a player signed from Benfica in January 2010.

Since returning to Stamford Bridge last season for his second spell at the helm, Mourinho has been ruthless in discarding high-profile players whom he does not regard as automatic starters.

Juan Mata, David Luiz and Romelu Lukaku are among the big names to have been sold on for considerable profit, while the likes of Fernando Torres, Demba Ba, Frank Lampard, Ashley Cole and Kevin De Bruyne have also been shown the exit door.

Speaking about Ramires last week, Mourinho said that he was pleased to have the Brazilian available again.

"Ramires is very important to us," the manager observed. "He is good tactically and can play in multiple positions with the same intensity.

"He's a dangerous guy when attacking and has a good defensive transition. He has a fantastic engine when pressing and that is important to us. The balance between the technical players like Ramires and the athletes is important."

Reus could stay at Dortmund, claims Bierhoff

Reus could stay at Dortmund, claims BierhoffThe Germany team manager believes that the 25-year-old has an emotional connection to his current club and could snub interest from elsewhere to stay put
Germany legend Oliver Bierhoff believes that Marco Reus could well stay at Borussia Dortmund at the end of the season.
The 25-year-old has been closely linked with the likes of Bayern Munich, a number of Premier League clubs and Liga giants Real Madrid and Barcelona.
However, Bierhoff, who works with Reus as part of the national team's backroom staff, thinks he could snub the interest in order to stay with his boyhood club.
"I could imagine him staying at Dortmund very easily," he told Sky90.
"Dortmund are like a bank for him. Marco's heart is at Dortmund. He knows what he's done there and that he is appreciated.
"Marco is someone who needs a harmonious environment.  But you also look at your colleagues and see who has won the DFB Pokal and the Bundesliga.
"Financially, Reus would get more anyway if he stayed at Dortmund.
"[A transfer abroad] will already be a risk but there's also great incentive. If you're top of Real Madrid or Barcelona's shopping list, you wonder whether this opportunity will come again."
Reus is under contract at BVB until June 2017 but has a €25 million buyout clause which becomes active next summer.

Bayern interest in Ramos is pure rumour - Sammer

Bayern interest in Ramos is pure rumour - Sammer
The reigning German champions' sporting director has denied the club have shown any real interest in the Real Madrid defender
Bayern Munich sporting director Matthias Sammer has played down speculation linking the German champions with a move for Real Madrid defender Sergio Ramos .
Reports in the Spanish media have suggested the Bundesliga leaders are keen to add the 28-year-old stopper to the squad, despite splashing out €26 million to sign Mehdi Benatia from Roma in August.
But Sammer has denied any interest in the Spain international, insisting the rumours that Ramos could be brought into the club to help replace injured duo David Alaba and Javi Martinez are nonsense.
"If the rumours in Spain were true, we'd be made up of four teams and have another Spanish sporting director," Sammer told Sky .
"Ramos has a long-term contract with a pretty club."
Austria international Alaba suffered a knee ligament injury during Bayern’s Champions League victory over Roma last week.
The 22-year-old underwent surgery on Friday and the club are hopeful his recovery will proceed according to plan.
"FCB chief medical officer Dr Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt said the operation was completed without complications," read a statement on the club website.
"Alaba will be discharged form hospital on Saturday and will wear a protective plaster cast on the knee for the next 14 days