Vijay Kumar: Robots that fly ... and cooperate
tumblr dot com
đȘŒ
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
cherry valley forever

tannertan36
Keni
taylor price
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

shark vs the universe

JBB: An Artblog!
h
Show & Tell

ç„æ„ / Permanent Vacation
almost home
Cosmic Funnies
Acquired Stardust
$LAYYYTER
No title available

â
sheepfilms
seen from Germany
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany
seen from Japan

seen from Italy
seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia
@disruptive-captains
Vijay Kumar: Robots that fly ... and cooperate
Then vs Now
Goals are dreams with deadlines!
Or is this the future of the smartphone?
Project Ara or Nexpaq? Which would you prefere?
Nexpaq, the future of the smartphone?
4 THINGS THAT EVERYONE NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT DISRUPTION
Every start-up from every incubator claims to be disruptive nowadays, but the claim always falls apart under any close examination. Usually itâs one of these three reasons.
1.   THERE ARE 2 TYPES OF DISRUPTION
Often CEOs declare their product to be disruptive, but fail to define in what manner. There are two types of disruption, and each one has a different measure of success. It is possible for a product to be disruptive in both styles but, if that is the plan, then progress must be measured accordingly.
·        NEW MARKET Disruption occurs when a product addresses non-consumption in an existing category, i.e. it is available for customers in a way the incumbents arenât. It could be cheaper, available in more places, in more countries, in more languages, etc. For some reason there are customers who canât use the existing products, but they will be able to use this new one.
I.e: Ryanair, the low cost airline, created an entire new market of budget travellers, not by stealing customers from Lufthansa or KLM, but by offering routes no one else did at prices that competed with trains and bus routes.
·        LOW END Disruption is when a product steals the cheapest and worst customers from the bottom of an existing market, usually by figuring out a business model that works with a lower-cost offering. You can only claim your company is low end disruptive when you have a working and profitable business model that is stealing low value customers from incumbents!
I.e: An example of this is the Flip digital camera which stole customers from the digital camera companies by being more affordable and easy to use. Bought for $590,000,000 by Cisco, Flip was the darling of the camera industry, the poster child of low-end disruption. What could go wrong, right? It turned out there was an even worse video camera at an even lower price point that the public were happy to use: the free camera found in iPhones and Android phones. 2 years after its acquisition Flip got to experience low end disruption itself. It was shut down, and 550 employees were made redundant.
This happens quicker than youâd think, which brings us to the next point.
2.   DISRUPTION CAN BE SWIFT
The seminal examples of disruption are things like Intel processors, steel mills and mainframe computers. This creates the impression that disruption takes years, even decades to fully impact an industry.
But that is not the case. In a world of online retail, app stores, and instant global availability market adoption takes minutes, not months. Whenever you see a claim of âfastest selling X in historyâ always remember that adoption is very quick these days and itâs accelerating. For example, Windows 3.1 sold 1 million copies in 2 months. Windows 8.0 sold 40 million copies in less than half the time.
Flip, as explained above, spent a mere 18 months at the top of the market before capitulating. Another example of is that of the satellite navigation companies Garmin and TomTom. In September 2007 they were worth a combined 38 billion dollars. A mere 12 months later, they werenât even worth 8. What happened? The iPhone.
A 38 billion dollar industry loses 3/4 of its market cap in a year because someone decide to add a maps app to the home screen. Like I said, this happens quicker than youâd think.
If youâre claiming your product is disruptive and there arenât barriers to adoption (e.g. technological/infrastructural barriers, existing long term contracts, language barriers, price barriers etc), then you should be expecting a massive adoption rate at a high speed. If youâre seeing slow adoption over time you can still have a successful billion dollar business, but itâs probably not a disruptive one.
3.   LOW PRICE ALONE IS NOT DISRUPTIVE
Disruptive innovations stem from technological or business model advantages that can scale as the business move upmarket in search of more-demanding customers.
Often youâll see a new business appear offering for pennies what others charge thousands for. The above example highlights this. While a roadside motel offers the same product as the four seasons, it will not disrupt it, because to attract the customers who visit the four seasons it will need better locations, better gardens, better staff, and better facilities. In short, it will need to adopt the identical cost structure of the Four Seasons, meaning it could no longer out-price them.
The web version of this can be seen every few months when a new STOCK photography site appears, selling imagery for $1 per picture and claiming itâs disrupting GettyImages. Again, to move upmarket and appeal to magazines and high end design houses, they need to start hiring more talented photographers and offering a wider range of imagery. Doing this would see them adopt the Getty Images cost structure, and therefore not disrupting them.
There is, however, an opportunity for new market disruption here, in that plenty of the market will pay for 600px images to use in blogs and newsletters, are less quality sensitive, and cannot justify high costs per article or newsletter.
4.   A BUSINESS DOESNâT NEED TO DISRUPT
Not all successful businesses are disruptive ones. Itâs entirely possible to just go toe to toe with an existing business and beat them at their own game. This can happen in lots of ways: better technology, design, product, route to market , price, etc. This is described in the graph above as âsustaining technologyâ, and is a well proven way to take.
If you are claiming your product is disruptive, keep note of 3 things. You have to decide what way itâs disruptive (so you can measure success), you donât necessarily get a long time span to do your disruption, and if being cheap is your only angle youâre not disruptive.
This isnât as easy as blindly screaming disruption every time someone launches âSpotify for Dentistsâ, but itâs worth considering nonetheless.
If you don't build your dream, someone will hire you to help build theirs
Dhirubhai Ambani
Donât worry about failure, you only have to be right once.
Drew Houston, Co-Founder & CEO of Dropbox
Disruptive evolution of business; you don't have to own the products to sell them!
Do the right things & be a good leader!
What do you need to start a business? Three simple things: know your product better than anyone, know your customer, and have a burning desire to succeed.
Dave Thomas, Founder of Wendyâs
Don't be afraid to fail and just try!
The secret to successful hiring is this: look for the people who want to change the world.
Marc Benioff, Salesforce CEO
Happy 10th Birthday, YouTube!
YouTube turns 10 today, so let's have a look at how it all started.
This was the very first video ever uploaded to YouTube by one of its co-founders, Jawed Karim, at the San Diego Zoo.
Former PayPal employees Chad Hurley, Steve Chen and Jawed Karim created the website in a room above a pizzeria and a Japanese restaurant.
Karim was frustrated that he couldn't find any footage online of the "nipplegate" incident of Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl 2004. At that time it was the most searched thing on the internet. So Karim decided to develop a platform where people could post their videos, of for example embarrassing moments at a concert.
The website went online on February the 14th 2005, but the first video was only uploaded on April the 23rd of that year.
Now, 10 years later, we couldn't imagine a world without this video-platform!
Find what you love, don't settle!
You donât learn to walk by following rules. You learn by doing and falling over.
Richard Branson, Virgin Group Founder
Uber Wins The 2014 Crunchie For Best Overall Startup
Congratulations to Uber for winning this desired award amongst other start-ups like GoPro and Tinder.
This year will be the year they've put themselves on the worldwide map as a global force not to be ignored. Even the legal issues and the fact they've been banned in several countries didn't stop them.
Way to go, and lots of lessons to learn from them!