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11 votes
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Google employees form union
42 votes -
Neofeudalism and the digital manor
14 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 -
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 -
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 -
Reddit buys TikTok rival Dubsmash
19 votes -
Hyundai Motor acquires Boston Dynamics from SoftBank for approximately $920 million
4 votes -
We read the paper that forced Timnit Gebru out of Google. Here’s what it says.
19 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 -
Tony Hsieh, former Zappos CEO and visionary, dies at 46
8 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 -
Amazon wants to win over Sweden – the Swedes have other ideas
7 votes -
Company made to change name that could be used for XSS vulnerabilities
11 votes -
AMD to acquire FPGA-creator Xilinx in an all-stock transaction valued at $35 billion
15 votes -
Streaming app Quibi is shutting down, after raising $1.75 billion and launching six months ago
25 votes -
The forklift truck drivers who never leave their desks
6 votes -
IBM to break up 109-year old company to focus on cloud growth
18 votes -
Helsinki rides the Slush wave toward a booming startup future – six venture capitalists share their thoughts on Finland's tech ecosystem
6 votes -
US House Democrats say Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet, Apple enjoy ‘monopoly power’ and recommend big changes
18 votes -
How open-source software transformed the business world
6 votes -
Firefox usage is down 85% despite Mozilla's top exec pay going up 400%
30 votes -
Viral hate, election interference, and hacked accounts: Inside the tech industry’s decades-long failure to reckon with risk
8 votes -
2020 Bundles - An overview of bundle-based offerings from major tech companies
5 votes -
Everything we know so far about the mysterious and confusing deal between TikTok, Oracle, and Walmart
4 votes -
ARM: UK-based chip designer sold to Nvidia
27 votes -
TikTok reaches deal to partner with Oracle, rejects Microsoft's plan
22 votes -
Unstaffed, digital supermarkets transform rural Sweden – Lifvs start-up has opened nineteen stores across the country, choosing remote places that have lost their local shops
15 votes -
Inside Amazon’s secret program to spy on workers’ private Facebook groups
7 votes -
Ceasefire, the site started last year by /r/ChangeMyView moderators, will shut down in a few months unless it reaches at least $1500/month on Patreon
22 votes -
Leaked salary spreadsheet reveals Microsoft employee earnings for a second year
10 votes -
Patreon raises another $90 million in Series E funding at a valuation of $1.2 billion
12 votes -
How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism - A new, short book by Cory Doctorow that looks at big tech as a monopoly problem
18 votes -
Reddit announces "power-ups", their plan to have individual subreddits unlock features through members paying for a monthly subscription
40 votes -
Amazon drivers are hanging smartphones in trees to get more work
6 votes -
Silicon Valley has deep pockets for African startups – if you’re not African
10 votes -
Six former eBay executives and employees charged with aggressive cyberstalking campaign targeting a couple who published an online newsletter critical of the company
23 votes -
Ad agency Ogilvy abused Twitch donation messages to cause multiple streamers to advertise Burger King for only a few dollars
9 votes -
Apple, Epic, and the App Store
9 votes -
Hermann Hauser: ARM sale to Nvidia would be a disaster
7 votes -
Mozilla signs fresh Google search deal worth mega-millions as 25% staff cut hits Servo, MDN, security teams
16 votes -
Microsoft faces complex technical challenges in TikTok carveout
5 votes -
Can killing cookies save journalism? A Dutch public broadcaster got rid of targeted digital ads and its revenues went up 62-79%.
31 votes -
A summary of the developments over the weekend regarding Microsoft's potential acquisition of TikTok
8 votes -
Apple surpasses Saudi Aramco to become world’s most valuable company
12 votes -
Spotify CEO talks Covid-19, artist incomes and podcasting
4 votes