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26 votes
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Champions of the Swedish women's league, Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC, have dissolved their senior football side and all players have been released from their contracts
8 votes -
Platforms, bundling and kill zones
6 votes -
Elon Musk says Apple CEO Tim Cook refused talks to buy Tesla at $60 billion valuation during 2017
9 votes -
The story of 1987's Acorn Archimedes, the first production ARM/RISC-based personal computer
9 votes -
Walmart will use fully driverless trucks to make deliveries in 2021
7 votes -
US federal prosecutors accuse Zoom executive of working with Chinese government to surveil users and suppress video calls
11 votes -
Discord raises another $100M in venture capital ($480M total now) at a valuation of $7 billion
11 votes -
Have you attended any virtual conferences? Tell me about the things that worked well.
This could be anything, from presentation tips, to efficiently-managed breakout rooms, to finding ways to engage participants. How did it make a difference? I’m writing an article about how...
This could be anything, from presentation tips, to efficiently-managed breakout rooms, to finding ways to engage participants. How did it make a difference?
I’m writing an article about how companies can run better online events, so thinking “ideas worth stealing.” Give me details!
It’d be easy to focus on the things that don’t work — they are legion — but I’m aiming to capture the good stuff that we all wish everyone would adopt. So leave out the disappointments, and just tell me about the things you enjoyed.
If you’ve run a virtual event I’m interested in your opinions too, but keep in mind that this is meant to be tips-and-tricks worth sharing.
11 votes -
Pornhub purges ten million videos after losing credit card support
23 votes -
Do you think that Shopify could soon rival Amazon?
Notice: This has been cross-posted to another website, and re-worded I currently work in the eCommerce industry, and have hands-on experience building up a Shopify site from the ground up. As I...
Notice: This has been cross-posted to another website, and re-worded
I currently work in the eCommerce industry, and have hands-on experience building up a Shopify site from the ground up. As I watch all of the developments that Shopify makes both from a technical development standpoint and logistical standpoint, it becomes more and more clear to me that Shopify can begin to take on Amazon directly.
The introduction of Shop app, which aggregates all shipments into a single application including those outside of Amazon, also allows users to browse products from any particular Shopify store. The app also notifies you of any shipping updates, and when packages have been delivered.
From a technical standpoint, Shopify's main attractions come down to a few things: order management, credit card processing, customer management, and plugin integrations. This is the core of Shopify's platform for both larger and smaller businesses. Though due to Shopify's requirement of using their CMS to serve your content, enterprise users have to look elsewhere in order to build something called "headless builds", which essentially use alternate CMS mixed with Shopify's CMS to continue serving their content.
There are a few companies that make such software in order to build out a fully custom site while still using the Shopify platform as its core, though at the moment they are a little 'hacky' but still fully functional. Given the interest in Shopify's platform at such a high level, they are very likely working on their own headless framework which could allow for 1) mainstream stores to integrate their existing platforms into a unified Shopify marketplace, and 2) to allow stores to build out fully custom websites using the Shopify platform at its core and also enroll them into a unified Shopify marketplace.
Amazon has mostly become a front for cheap Chinese-made products, laden with review manipulation and questionable product quality. By instead bringing large brands on board with a unified Shopify marketplace, those stores can sell quality products backed by their brands which can gain trust from customers, and will give rise to smaller brands that may have been unnoticed by larger populations.
[ For example, I recently bought a pair of shoes from a very popular Shopify store: they represent quality, comfort, and eco-friendliness. I personally find myself more willing to spend money on quality products from companies I know I can trust. ]What's everyone's thoughts? Are there any general problems that could come from Shopify trying to jump-start a full-blown marketplace? Do you think that companies would be willing to integrate their ERP's and CMS's with whatever API's or headless framework Shopify decides to build out?
9 votes -
Electronic Arts reaches agreement for recommended acquisition of British racing game developer Codemasters for approximately $1.2 billion
8 votes -
Reddit buys TikTok rival Dubsmash
19 votes -
AMC warns it’ll run out of cash in January, calls out Warner Bros.’ shift to HBO Max
13 votes -
PayPal to introduce £9 a year fee for 'inactive' accounts
18 votes -
The games people play with cash flow
9 votes -
Inside the surprisingly big business of UK packaged ice
8 votes -
Sony is buying anime streaming service Crunchyroll from AT&T for $1.175 billion.
13 votes -
Hyundai Motor acquires Boston Dynamics from SoftBank for approximately $920 million
4 votes -
FedEx and UPS hit companies with unexpected holiday shipping limits
9 votes -
Uber to give up on self-driving tech and finds a partner in Aurora instead
8 votes -
We read the paper that forced Timnit Gebru out of Google. Here’s what it says.
19 votes -
EverQuest studio Daybreak Games acquired by EG7
4 votes -
Aston Martin in row over 'sock puppet PR firm' pushing anti-electric vehicle study. Report disputing green benefits of EVs attributed to company registered to wife of carmaker’s director.
7 votes -
Spotify claims it’s dominating the podcasting market because of a million-plus tiny podcasts
8 votes -
Salesforce signs definitive agreement to acquire Slack for approximately $27.7 billion
23 votes -
Unilever to try out four-day working week in New Zealand
5 votes -
A case for the possible sale of Wizards of the Coast
6 votes -
Capitalists are bad at business
10 votes -
Tony Hsieh, former Zappos CEO and visionary, dies at 46
8 votes -
Sex, lies and video games: Oomba was a startup designed to make a lot of money from the games industry — instead, everyone played each other
12 votes -
Penguin Random House to buy Simon & Schuster
5 votes -
How a $17 billion bailout fund intended for Boeing ended up in very different hands
4 votes -
GM will recall about seven million US pickup trucks and SUVs from the 2007-2014 model years to replace potentially dangerous Takata air bag inflators
12 votes -
Roblox files for IPO - Kid-focused, user-generated content platform has not yet turned a profit despite skyrocketing DAUs, bookings
5 votes -
BuzzFeed to acquire HuffPost in multi-year partnership with Verizon Media
10 votes -
Apple will reduce App Store commission to 15% for small businesses earning up to $1 million per year, starting January 1, 2021
16 votes -
Norwegian Air files for bankruptcy protection in Ireland – low-cost airline to continue reduced flight schedule and shares will still be traded in Oslo
5 votes -
Panasonic explores a European battery deal with Norway's largest energy and industrial companies
4 votes -
Sweden has shut down one of four nuclear reactors at its largest power station after over forty years of operation, with operators citing a lack of profitability
8 votes -
Deutsche Bank suggests 5% tax on home workers to support those impacted by the pandemic
12 votes -
Take-Two Interactive reaches agreement for recommended acquisition of British racing game developer Codemasters for almost $1 billion
7 votes -
Amazon wants to win over Sweden – the Swedes have other ideas
7 votes -
Norwegian Air said it is facing a “very uncertain future” after the government of Norway refused to grant further financial assistance to the airline
6 votes -
Company made to change name that could be used for XSS vulnerabilities
11 votes -
AMC’s revenue plummets by more than ninety percent as theaters remain empty
15 votes -
How Sierra was captured, then killed, by a massive accounting fraud
21 votes -
What is the right price for fashion?
7 votes -
Sony nears acquisition of anime-streaming service Crunchyroll for almost $1 billion
13 votes -
AMD to acquire FPGA-creator Xilinx in an all-stock transaction valued at $35 billion
15 votes