The CEO of AppNext provides clues to the future of apps.
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It's easy to hate digital ads, especially the personalized ads that follow you across the internet. But they're creating a more efficient advertising market.
Twitter won't stream the NFL's Thursday Night Football games again this year. Instead, Amazon has won the rights to stream 10 of the NFL's games, both companies announced on Tuesday. Amazon paid a whopping $50 million for the deal, according to The Wall Street Journal. That number is a fivefold increase from the $10 million Twitter reportedly paid the NFL for the same rights in 2016. The deal was a landmark one for both sides at the time, and it signaled Twitter's growing ambitions to become a destination for premium live video. Twitter had boasted of the NFL deal as a key plank in its plan to reignite its sluggish user growth and to transform itself as the place to go to follow live events. But some advertisers reportedly found the audience for football games on Twitter to be underwhelming. Still, losing the rights to stream the games is an embarrassing loss for Twitter, as its COO/CFO Anthony Noto is the NFL's former CFO. "Since last year, we have collaborated on over 40 live stream partnerships and we will continue to bring the best live content to our customers around the world," a Twitter spokesperson told Business Insider on Tuesday. "In Q1 2017, we aired more than 800 hours of live stream content from over 400 events across sports, news, politics and entertainment. The NFL was a great partner to launch our strategy and we will continue to work with them to bring great content to our passionate sports fans." Twitter, Amazon, Facebook, and YouTube had all bid to win the rights to this year's football season, according to Recode. While Twitter streamed Thursday Night Football for free to everyone, Amazon will restrict its streams to its paying Prime subscribers. NBC, CBS, and Verizon will also stream the games live to their subscribers. SEE ALSO: The fad may be over, but Pokémon Go still has 65 million monthly active players Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: TERRY CREWS: Here's how my NFL career helped and hurt me Worldwide Smart Fashion (Clothing and Accessories) Market to Reach $2,938.9 Million by 20224/4/2017 Individuals focusing on their fitness and the launch of new innovative technological clothing by designers will transform the way the textile and fabric industry works. The smart clothing industry is expected to grow at a CAGR of 116.8% and reach $2,717.6 million by 2022.
The cost to 21st Century Fox is low for now. A toxic culture, however, can damage long-run efforts to broaden consumer appeal.
Worldwide Emotion Analytics Market to Grow at a CAGR of 82.9% to Aggregate $1,711.0 Million by 20224/4/2017 Increasing demand for videos, biometric sensors, artificial intelligence (AI), and mobile & web applications is expected to drive the emotion analytics market. AI is the leading technology which is expected to grow at a CAGR of 83.9% during the forecast period and will drive the worldwide emotions analytics market to reach $1,711 million by 2022.
Worldwide Emotion Analytics Market to Grow at a CAGR of 82.9% to Aggregate $1,711.0 Million by 20224/4/2017 Increasing demand for videos, biometric sensors, artificial intelligence (AI), and mobile & web applications is expected to drive the emotion analytics market. AI is the leading technology which is expected to grow at a CAGR of 83.9% during the forecast period and will drive the worldwide emotions analytics market to reach $1,711 million by 2022.
Concern among big advertisers that their material is being shown next to YouTube videos posted by extremists shows that every system has its weaknesses.
Eisai to Launch Smell Identification Test Upsit Series in Japan
Snapchat's user base is increasingly getting older, and that's good news for investors (SNAP)4/4/2017 Snapchat is still widely known for primarily attracting younger users, but older people are increasingly flocking to the ephemeral messaging app as well. According to a recent report from comScore charted for us by Statista, people aged 35 and older accounted for nearly 46% of Snapchat's adult user base in the US as of December 2016, up from just 24% one year before. Snapchat users under the age of 18 weren't included in comScore's study, so the percentages aren't indicative of the app's entire user base. But Snapchat's nearly twofold increase among older users is a good sign for investors, who are closely watching whether the app can catch on outside of its core millennial demographic. Snapchat last reported in February that it had 158 million daily users, and investors are expecting to get an update on the app's user growth alongside Snap Inc.'s first quarterly earnings report as a public company in the coming weeks. Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: WPP CEO Sir Martin Sorrell on Snapchat becoming the 'third force' to Google and Facebook |
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April 2017
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