Enterprise Reading List | June 19, 2015 | The latest news about growth and innovation within the enterprise space.
Have a great weekend, | Hiring? Access 250+ new candidates every Monday. Great companies are built with great teams. With Hired, access over 250 pre-screened developers, designers, and tech sales professionals every week all ready to explore new opportunities. Use Hired to find the best talent in tech so you can focus on what you do best. Sign up and make the key hires you need. | | Computer World "The new line of Wave Analytics Apps is intended to extend the Analytics Cloud further with prepackaged templates designed to allow business users in particular job functions to find context-specific meaning in their data." | | Engadget "Microsoft is entering the virtual reality conversation with a one-two punch: partnerships with both Oculus and Valve VR." | | ZDnet "Apple's current plans call for a video camera to be integrated into the top bezel of the Apple Watch 2, enabling users to make and receive FaceTime calls on the move via their wrists. The company telegraphed its interest in increasing Apple Watch FaceTime functionality during the rollout of watchOS 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference earlier this month." | | USA Today Money "Fitbit CEO James Park owned 20.0 million shares of Fitbit going into the initial public offering. At the $30 a share price, that means Park's holdings translate into $600.6 million.And don't think this is just paper wealth. Park actually sold 767,785 shares in the offering, hauling in $23 million right off the bat." | | BBC "US telecoms company AT&T faces a $100m (£63m) fine for slowing down the internet speeds of millions of customers on unlimited data plans without informing them." | | Tech Crunch "Digital rights organization the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has published its fifth annual Who has your back? report into online service providers' transparency and privacy practices when it comes to government requests for accessing user data." | | Tech Crunch "The new format is meant to allow programmers to compile their code for the browser (currently the focus is on C/C++, with other languages to follow), where it is then executed inside the JavaScript engine. Instead of having to parse the full code, though, which can often take quite a while (especially on mobile), WebAssembly can be decoded significantly faster" | | | You are receiving this email because you believe that the best startup articles and videos are made by active members of the startup community. © 2009-2015 Startup Digest. Startup Digest is a registered trademark of Startup Weekend. Privacy Policy. All rights reserved. | | |
No comments:
Post a Comment