Remember when WhatsApp didn’t want to make money?



It’s a great move.
Messaging is huge, and there is vast scope for bringing brands and businesses on board. It’s a process that’s been happening for years, predominantly with Asia-based chat apps that let users follow official accounts, but enterprising business people in emerging markets have long found ways to make use of the hugely popular WhatsApp service despite no features.
Two years ago I wrote that chat apps were becoming as important as social media for brands, and that shift has only continued. So it is high time WhatsApp got on board given its insane userbase of more than one billion people.
But it wasn’t always that way.
WhatsApp once had a very strict focus on messaging only, with plenty of negative words for rival companies who dared to mix business with their chat app product

SpaceX runs its Tesla-powered pusher at 220 mph on Hyperloop test track.

Elon Musk apparently felt left out when student teams competed to achieve top speed on the SpaceX Hyperloop test track last weekend, because he decided to run the SpaceX pusher vehicle, which includes a Tesla drivetrain, down the track on its own to see how fast it could go.
The Tesla/SpaceX vehicle, which works basically like a Hyperloop tug boat to propel some of the student pods that don’t have their own built-in motor for acceleration, managed to get up to 220 mph in the sealed vacuum tunnel, which is faster than the winning student team at 201 mph.

Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8 is a cautious return for the world’s best phablet.

Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8 is a cautious return for the world’s best phablet
Between the explosions, the recalls and its subsequent afterlife as airport PA system fodder, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that the Galaxy Note 7 was a very good phone. In fact, the line has always been one of the industry’s best and most innovative. It seems it only takes a few well-publicized explosions to tarnish a beloved brand.
But Samsung rebounded quickly. In fact, the company didn’t appear to take any real financial hit from the Note 7 fiasco. It did, however, do its due diligence, investigating the cause of the phone’s battery issues, publicly apologizing and instituting an eight-point safety check in hopes of assuring that it wouldn’t ever repeat its mistakes again. And in spite of some momentary speculation that the company might dump the Note altogether, it was pretty clear to Samsung from the outset that the name it had spent a half-dozen years building up was too valuable to abandon.
Unveiled late last month, the Note 8 is the product of a newly cautious company. It’s easy to see how Samsung’s relentless push to include all the latest bells and whistles might have contributed to its predecessor’s problems. The new Note isn’t a bombardment of new features. Much of what the product brings to the table was borrowed directly from the recently announced Galaxy S8. And most of the rest that’s new seems to largely be an attempt to distinguish the phablet as a more premium option than the similarly sized Galaxy S8+
But that’s not a bad thing, really. The new device is built atop one of the most solid foundations in the smartphone space. And the additions — refinements, really — mostly help to make it that much better.

Apple and Accenture teaming up to help enterprises build advanced mobility tools


Apple and Accenture teaming up to help enterprises build advanced mobility tools

There is a general misconception that Apple is strictly about consumer tools, but the fact is that the company has a big presence in the enterprise just by the sheer number of iPhones and iPads in the business world. It also has some high-profile partnerships with hefty enterprise vendors like IBMSAP and Cisco. Today, Apple announced that it is building on those relationships with a brand new partnership with Accenture, the global consulting firm.
The companies plan to work together to help customers build advanced digital projects on iOS devices. Apple of course brings its iOS expertise to the table. Accenture comes into play because it understands how to connect to legacy backend systems that are lurking inside every large enterprise organization. The company has also long worked with established companies that aretrying to become digital operations. Both of these are targets for the new project.
Ten years after the iPhone debuted, there are more in-house iOS programmers and more mobile development projects than ever before, but companies have struggled to take advantage of iOS to build digital tools to truly transform organizations and how they operate, according to Susan Prescott, VP for apps, markets and services at Apple.
“We’ve seen an increase in development efforts within companies. In fact, in the last three years, the number of in-house iOS developers has doubled,” she said. “So the demand is definitely there, but enterprises still need great partners to reinvent workflows and tap into backend systems.”
She adds, “This partnership with Accenture is about taking that further. What’s really exciting is that this isn’t just about optimizing existing apps and business processes — it’s about designing new apps and experiences using new technologies.”
Apple is looking to work directly with Accenture and enterprise customers to help them dig into enterprise data, and find new workflows that they have never considered before. This isn’t unlike what it has been doing (and continues to do) with IBM, but Apple says it’s going to have a seat at the table with Accenture personnel and share their expertise around iOS to help solve unique enterprise problems — and that is a big difference with this project.
As for Accenture, Gene Reznick, senior managing director for technology ecosystem and ventures for the firm, says they are looking to capitalize on some specific areas with this partnership including helping to create “engaging user experiences.” They hope to improve how organizations interact with customers in a digital way, something that continues to elude many companies. Secondly, they want to make that experience as meaningful as possible by building connections to relevant back-end systems and surfacing helpful data.
While this could take many forms, they see exploiting the burgeoning area of Internet of Things, where they could build iOS applications to help monitor large industrial machines or other complex operations from an iPad or iPhone. They could supplement this idea by building augmented reality applications with Apple’s AR development toolset, ARKit to help with training or repair assistance right on the iOS device.
For starters, the teams will work together in San Francisco, but the hope is that over time, they will expand the project and build additional teams at some subset of the 30 Accenture Studios located throughout the world.

Fitbit is betting big on the Ionic smartwatchs


Fitbit is betting big on the Ionic smartwatch




Fitbit is betting big on the Ionic smartwatch
Fitbit is betting big on the Ionic smartwatch Posted 5 hours ago by Brian Heater (@bheater) Next Story Fitbit is betting big on the Ionic smartwatch ADVERTISEMENT AdChoices The Ionic is a bit of a Hail Mary pass. The smartwatch represents years of R&D and millions of dollars in acquisitions converging into one product. It’s one the company’s CEO has been talking up months before its official unveiling, pointing to it as a sign that Fitbit has fight left in it, even as the wearable industry continues to contract around it. The Ionic is more fully realized than last year’s Blaze, which skirted the line between fitness band and smartwatch, thanks in no small part to the fact that Fitbit built it on top of startups like Pebble, Coin and Blaze. The company was able to draw on years of hardware and software development for the Ionic, and what holes it wasn’t able to fill itself, it spent tens of millions of dollars to find the people who could. But while the device is designed to be a capable, everyday product, what really sets it apart is a focus on fitness. It makes sense — not only has health been Fitbit’s focus all this time, it’s arguably as close as any company has come to finding a true killer app in the market. As CEO James Park told me during an interview ahead of the product’s launch, “I think Apple has gotten better understanding what these devices are good for. You can see in their marketing over the years it started shifting from being a computer on your wrist to being more fitness oriented.” In other words, the one company that’s really managed to make some headway in the smartwatch space has doubled down on health. Rather than working to build that functionality into its product, health and fitness are at Ionic’s core. Icons for step count, heart rate and calories burned pop up right next to the date and time when you first turn on the phone. The Ionic does your standard range of Fitbit activity things: continuous heart-rate monitoring, multi-sport tracking, swim stats (yep, it’s waterproof) and sleep monitoring. All pretty standard stuff. Fitbit is, however, uniquely positioned to bring some extra tricks to the device. Back in 2015, the company picked up FitStar, and has since slowly begun integrating its service into its own offerings. Starting at some unspecified time in the Fall, the company will be adding audio and video coaching to the app. It’s a nice idea — after all, the gamification of fitness can get people off the couch, but even with a baked-in social network, it only goes so far. Perhaps some proxy personal trainer will help people stay on track. The company has also promised all sorts of customization on that front, offering up routines tailored to users’ specific needs. The company definitely has the deep resources to offer that up — as it notes in its press material, Fitbit has recorded, 79 trillion steps, five billion nights of sleep and 160 billion hours of exercise in its decade-long existence. That’s a tremendous resource for determining habits and fitness routines. Though, none of that is implemented yet, and it will likely be a few months before the courses are added. As I write this, I’ve been wearing the device for two days now, but the software is still pre-production, so I can’t yet offer any sort of a deep dive on that side of things. There’s still a lot coming on that front — including, most notably, third-party apps. That, after all, is what many analysts consider to be the dividing line between souped-up fitness tracker and smartwatch. That’s the driving motivation behind the company’s Pebble purchase. As many bummed former fans/supporters will tell you, Fitbit essentially scrapped the startup. There was some speculation around precisely how the company would incorporate the smartwatch maker, and it turns out that it was, at least for now, primarily focused on its app store/design. “When we acquired Pebble, they had their SDK and then they were just developing this new Web‑based paradigm of developing wearable apps,” Park told me during our interview. “All of that technology and DNA came over and now it’s being launched a first time, Ionic. Yeah, that wasn’t about the Pebble hardware. It’s about all the software developer experiences that they had.” As is to be expected, there’s not much here in the way of apps at the moment. The company is launching with a handful of partners designed to highlight the device’s functionality. I suspect Fitbit also offered up launch exclusives in order to bring partners on board, which is why you get, say, Pandora and not Pandora and Spotify. There’s also Starbucks, to highlight the mobile payment system, and Strava for added fitness metrics. As for when more apps will begin to populate the store, that’s anyone’s guess, really. As a million manufacturers will happily tell you, launching an app store is really hard. This isn’t an Iowa cornfield. Just because you build it doesn’t mean they’ll come. That said, Fitbit’s got the traction and the install base, so depending on how well the Ionic does out of the gate, there’s certainly a chance developers will want to get on the device — and a big part of the Pebble acquisition was creating a simple, web-based platform for developers to transfer apps to Ionic. Park again, “Given the volumes of Fitbit Blazes that we’ve shipped, we think we’re going to be pretty successful in the smartwatch category in terms of an install base. Not only that, with the JavaScript and cloud‑based IED, I think it’s going to be a pretty exciting story for developers. You don’t have to be the most experienced developer to be able to write these applications. If you just know some Web technologies, you can crank out an app literally within minutes. You don’t need to know Java or Objective‑C, etc.” Now, about that hardware. It does, indeed, look like the leaks suggested, which isn’t great. I will say that it actually looks better in person. I guess some gadgets, like people, just don’t photograph well. The Ionic’s looks are also dependent, in part, on the color scheme. Fitbit has some weird internal logic that ties them all to space themes. I won’t go into that now, except to say that the orange and blue has something to do with a convergence of Earth and Mars (no joke). But all you really need to know is that it’s a convergence of ugly. The black and gray options are much better looking and suited to the product’s design minimalism. The watch has a long, flat design, which curves almost imperceptively, to better fit on a wrist. I’ve been wearing it with the default silicone band and find it pretty comfortable. It’s big, though. I’m around six feet tall and try to be mindful of the fact that not everyone is. Smartwatches often neglect to accommodate smaller users, but I did expect Fitbit to be mindful of the substantial number of women in its user base. We’ll be letting a female user test the product, as well, to get a better idea of the fit, but from a cursory glance, the product may be too big for many wrists. Given the state of the wearable industry, a smartwatch doesn’t seem like the logical next step for Fitbit. After all, the company was recently eclipsed by Xiaomi in wearable sales for the first time ever, a fact that many commenters have rightly suggested is driven by pricing. It’s hard to compete with a company that is offering a $15 wrist-worn tracker, but if anyone is positioned to do so, it’s probably Fitbit. Instead, the company is taking the opposite approach. That said, it does appear that it’s also looking to court users on the other end of the spectrum. “The best way to put it is we don’t want price to be a barrier to entering the Fitbit ecosystem,” Park told me. “We know that there has to be a lot of different price points that we have to hit to really be comprehensive. I can’t go into exactly how we’re going to price it, but we’re going to have entry level devices all the way to the most advanced. It will all be competitive for the price point.” And that said, the Ionic’s $299 price point is actually pretty aggressive as far as smartwatches go. It’s $100 more than the Blaze, but it’s a fair bit less than offerings from Apple and Samsung. And there’s certainly the makings of a solid offering here, including a promised four days of battery life — an extremely appealing proposition for a fully functioning smartwatch. I can’t wait to put that to the test. Stay tuned for a review.

The Most Popular Blog Categories According To Google [Chart]

The Most Popular Blog Categories According To Google [Chart]

4 YEARS AGO BY DIANA ADAMS
Most blogging platforms allow you to choose blog categories to organize your content. At first you might choose your categories without giving them much thought, but as time goes on, you will start to realize the importance of carefully choosing the best categories for your blog. The blog categories you choose will be part of the blog’s map for success, and they will determine the direction of your content. Luckily, you can change them as you grow, so there is no harm done if you need to rethink your blog’s categories.
It’s important to do some planning before you decide on your blog categories. You want to stay broad, yet relevant. You don’t want to end up with one or two posts in a category, and if you have that, you’ve either not written many posts or you have a category that is probably doesn’t represent what your blog is all about.
For example, we write a lot about Star Wars here on Bit Rebels, but having a Star Wars category would be a bit too narrow for us. Instead, we choose a category appropriate for Star Wars, which could also encompass many other similar topics. That category is called “Geek.”
We have 8 one-word blog categories here on Bit Rebels, and for us, that is the perfect number. Each of our 8,814 articles fits nicely into one of those categories. I would recommend that you have as few categories as possible. I found a very helpful article about this that was written back in 2008, and it’s still relevant today. You can find it at How To Choose Categories For Your Blog on ProBlogger.
If you are just starting your blog, you might still be flexible about what kind of content you’ll produce. In that case, it might be helpful to know what some of the most popular blog categories are according to Google. This information was derived using the Google “allintitle” Operator (thanks to Wpromote). Tomorrow I will be publishing a follow up article about how to use the Google “allintitle” Operator to extract all kinds of valuable information. Enjoy!

The Most Popular Blog Categories According To Google

most-popular-blog-categories-chart

NO 1 BLOG IN THE WORLD

1.) Help Scout blog [Customer Support]

URL: http://www.helpscout.net/blog/
Approx. Subscribers: 65,000+
Main income source: Software
The blog I’m responsible for! Help Scout is support software that is trusted by thousands of small businesses. We run the gamut over on the Help Scout blog, but our bread-and-butter will always be customer support.
Here are a few of my personal favorites:
We also use a large selection of resources to grow our traffic and subscriber base.

The 100 Most Popular Google Keywords

What keywords on Google are searched the most?
We know branded terms like “Gmail” and “Craigslist” are frequently searched, and are a common point of reference for users. But what about non-brands? What about true keywords that, undoubtedly, are the aim of many traffic-thirsty SEOs across the world?
This was the question we wondered earlier this month. With help from the team at the great keyword research tool SEMRush, we were able to get it answered.
The below visualization is a list of the 100 most searched for non-branded keywords on Google, in the United States region.
The list was determined by manually sifting through the most popular search terms overall to find keywords that were not associated with a brand. In addition, we also removed porn-related keywords.
For clarity, the top five most searched overall are “Gmail”, “Craigslist”, “Amazon”, “Yahoo”, and.. “Porn”. None of those are included on this list – because a giant list of navigational brand searches and porn isn’t interesting.

TOP BLOGS


searches for blog niches

The top 5 types of blogs searched for on Google

  1. Fashion blogs with 40,500 monthly searches
  2. Food blogs with 14,800 monthly searches
  3. Beauty blogs with 8,100 monthly searches
  4. Travel blogs with 8,100 monthly searches
  5. Music blogs with 6,600 monthly searches
I have to admit, I was kind of surprised music blogs were so far up on the list. I guess it’s one niche I don’t really follow, but obviously a lot of other people do.

Other interesting insights related to Google searches for blogs

Obviously, my list wasn’t all-inclusive. There are a lot more different types of blogs out there. I looked through Google’s recommendations for related searches and found a few that I had missed:
  • Decorating blogs 6,600 monthly searches. I was using the term “decor” and not “decorating”, but the difference is dramatic. Decor blogs only gets 720 searches a month.
  • Makeup blogs 2,900 monthly searches. Beauty blogs gets a lot of searches, but even this narrower topic gets a good amount of searches
  • Blogs about life 2,900 monthly searches. Lifestyle blogs are popular these days and people are searching for your blogs about life.

CHOCKLATE CAKE

Ingredients1 cup butter, softened3 cups packed brown sugar4 large eggs2 teaspoons vanilla extract2-2/3 cups all-purpose flour3/4 cup baking cocoa3 teaspoons baking soda1/2 teaspoon salt1-1/3 cups sour cream1-1/3 cups boiling waterFROSTING:1/2 cup butter, cubed3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, chopped3 ounces semisweet chocolate, chopped5 cups confectioners' sugar1 cup (8 ounces) sour cream2 teaspoons vanilla extractDirectionsPreheat oven to 350°. Grease and flour three 9-in. round baking pans.In a large bowl, cream butter and brown sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in vanilla. In another bowl, whisk flour, cocoa, baking soda and salt; add to creamed mixture alternately with sour cream, beating well after each addition. Stir in water until blended.Transfer to prepared pans. Bake 30-35minutes or until a toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool in pans 10 minutes before removing to wire racks to cool completely.For frosting, in a metal bowl over simmering water, melt butter and chocolates; stir until smooth. Cool slightly.In a large bowl, combine confectioners'sugar, sour cream and vanilla. Add chocolate mixture; beat until smooth. Spread frosting between layers and over top and sides of cake. Refrigerate leftovers.Yield:16 servings.

CHILDRENS LEARN WHAT THEY LIVE

1) If a children live with  Honesty.
       He learn  Truth.
2) If a children lives with Tolerance.
       He learns to Patience.
3) If a children live with Praise.
       He learns to Appreciate.
4) If a children live with Security.
       He learns to Faith.
5) If a children live with Fairness.
       He learns to Justice.
6) If a children live with Encouragement.
       He learns to Confidence.
7) If a children live with Acceptance & Friendship.
       He learns to Find Love in the World.

DRAGON FRUIT

Why dragon fruit is so rich in nutritions?
Because
Give your ans
Please.

TECH CRUNCH

Did you know that typically 50% of all web traffic lands on the homepage of a website and it takes a visitor only 1/10th of a second to form an impression about your website?
Failure to impress at this stage is almost a certain way to alienate potential readers for good. Big publications know this more than anyone — after all, it’s their business.

So are there any tips or best practices we can draw from studying what they do? Let’s find out.