What Goop and Infowars have in common: America’s favorite wellness products

When it comes to wellness products, the “two Americas” that we’ve been hearing about tend to unite. It’s the power of natural products that we become harmoniously energized effusive over. Things like nascent iodine (for thyroid), cordyceps mushrooms (for overall vitality), ashwagandha (for managing stress and fatigue) and other such life-enhancing natural products are used and touted by all. 

Interestingly enough, many of the alt-med products sold on Gwenyth Paltrow’s Goop and Moon Juice and conservative radio show host Alex Jones’ store contain the same ingredients and are surprisingly similar – albeit under different branding. 

To determine whether you should your mornings need a little Sun Potion or Wake Up America Immune Support Blend 100% Organic CoffeeQuartz created a compendium of these natural supplements on both sides of the branding and political spectrum for your perusing and purchasing pleasure. 

Now Read This: Google To Stop Reading Your Emails In Order to Serve Up Gmail Ads

Google is stopping one of the most controversial advertising formats: ads inside Gmail that scan users’ email contents. The decision didn’t come from Google’s ad team, but from its cloud unit, which is angling to sign up more corporate customers.

To better serve enterprise users, Alphabet Inc.‘s Google Cloud software suite saw a bevy of business customers that were concerned by privacy issues. 

Ads will continue to appear inside the free version of Gmail, as promoted messages. But instead of scanning a user’s email, the ads will now be targeted with other personal information Google already pulls from sources such as search and YouTube. Ads based on scanned email messages drew lawsuits and some of the most strident criticism the company faced in its early years, but offered marketers a much more targeted way to reach consumers. 

G Suite has more than 3 million paying companies and had more than doubled its user base among large businesses in the past year. It’s largest rival is, of course, Microsoft. 

The iPhone turns 10. What will the iPhone be like in 10 more years?

It’s 2027, and you’re walking down the street, confident you’ll arrive at your destination even though you don’t know where it is. You may not even remember why your device is telling you to go there.

There’s a voice in your ear giving you turn-by-turn directions and, in between, prepping you for this meeting. Oh, right, you’re supposed to be interviewing a dog whisperer for your pet-psychiatry business. You arrive at the coffee shop, look around quizzically, and a woman you don’t recognize approaches. A display only you can see highlights her face and prints her name next to it in crisp block lettering, Terminator-style. Afterward, you’ll get an automatically generated transcript of everything the two of you said.

As the iPhone this week marks the 10th anniversary of its first sale, it remains one of the most successful consumer products in history. But by the time it celebrates its 20th anniversary, the “phone” concept will be entirely uprooted: That dog-whisperer scenario will be brought to you even if you don’t have an iPhone in your pocket.

More at Wall Street Journal

Tesla will reveal the finished Model 3 in July

Tesla is gearing up for the big reveal of the Model 3, its first mass-market car. 

CEO Elon Musk unveiled the car in March of 2016, but Tesla will show off the production version of the sedan in July. 

The summer premiere will offer the roughly 400,000 customers who pre-ordered the vehicle a chance to see the final version before deliveries begin at the end of the year.

New”superglue’ could seal the deal for stretchable batteries, soft robots

Superglue is great for fixing busted bookshelves, suitcase wheels, and – of course – shoes. But what if you want to fuse something a little more jiggly, like the gel cushions used to pad crumbling spinal discs? You’d be out of luck, until now. That’s because scientists have created a new kind of glue that can bond hard and soft substances to hydrogels, Jello-like materials used in everything from medical devices to soft robots. Previously, researchers in these fields used an ultraviolet light treatment, but it could take up to an hour or more to attach the surfaces together. Now, a team of experimental physicists has invented a new adhesive, made of superglue’s main ingredient – cyanoacrylate – plus an organic compound that diffuses into the parts being fused, leading to a tough bond without brittle residue left behind. This nonsolvent delays the hardening of the glue just long enough to let it seep into each layer being pressed together, forming a bond within seconds. The hydrogel bond can hold up to 1 kilogram and stretch up to 2000%, the researchers report this week in Science Advances. That’s good news for spine docs and robotics buffs alike – not only can the new adhesive help build devices like this octobot, but it can also be used to deliver drugs through soft, permeable patches that adhere to the skin. It can also help researchers designing stretchable batteries and electronic skin, hydrogel-based electronic patches packed with sensors for taking vital signs and communicating with outside devices. The only downside? It won’t be on the market for another 3 to 5 years.

This article originally appeared at: http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/06/new-superglue-could-seal-deal-stretchable-batteries-soft-robots?utm_source=MIT+Technology+Review&utm_campaign=c73f80500c-The_Download&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_997ed6f472-c73f80500c-154288857.

New ingredients for edible electronics

“Eat your Vegemite. It’s good for you”

Turns out this silly advice might someday keep you cancer free


Toxicity shouldn’t be an issue for medical devices made from Vegemite or Marmite

Love it or hate it, Marmite might have a place in medicine. Scientists in Australia have used this British favourite, along with Vegemite and jelly, in electrodes for hydrogel-based devices that assess digestive problems in patients.

Stomach-related health problems are increasing: stomach cancer is the second deadliest cancer and 76.6% of people with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) are undiagnosed. Traditional methods of detecting these illnesses, such as endoscopy, colonoscopy and surgery, are often invasive and unpleasant. One alternative is to use small devices, known as electronic capsules, that pass easily through the digestive system. However, researchers must make them using materials that will not damage the human body.

To achieve this, Holly Warren and colleagues at the University of Wollongong transformed everyday food products into edible hydrogel electrodes, that they used as components in medical sensing devices. The high salt content of Marmite and Vegemite makes them good conductive materials for this purpose. They also used jelly, which is low in salt, and made it much more conductive than either Marmite or Vegemite by adding salt to it. They could use these particular sensors to detect pressure abnormalities in the stomach.

 

This article originally appeared at: https://www.chemistryworld.com/news/new-ingredients-for-edible-electronics/3007619.article?utm_source=MIT+Technology+Review&utm_campaign=c73f80500c-The_Download&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_997ed6f472-c73f80500c-154288857.

Vladimir Putin Is Getting Interested in Bitcoin’s Biggest Rival

Ethereum, the world’s largest cryptocurrency after bitcoin, has caught the attention of Vladimir Putin as a potential tool to help Russia diversify its economy beyond oil and gas.

Putin met Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg Economic Forum last week and supported his plans to build contacts with local partners to implement blockchain technology in Russia, according to a statement on Kremlin’s website.

“The digital economy isn’t a separate industry, it’s essentially the foundation for creating brand new business models,” Putin said at the event, discussing means to boost growth long-term after Russia ended its worst recession in two decades.

Virtual currencies could help the economy by making transactions happen more quickly and safely online. Besides being a method of exchange, Ethereum can also serve as a ledger for everything from currency contracts to property rights, speeding up business by cutting out intermediaries such as public notaries.

Russia’s central bank has already deployed an Ethereum-based blockchain as a pilot project to process online payments and verify customer data with lenders including Sberbank PJSC, Deputy Governor Olga Skorobogatova said at the St. Petersburg event. She didn’t rule out using Ethereum technologies for the development of a national virtual currency for Russia down the road.

Last week, Russia’s state development bank VEB agreed to start using Ethereum for some administrative functions. Steelmaker Severstal PJSC tested Ethereum’s blockchain for secure transfer of international credit letters.

“Blockchain may have the same effect on businesses that the emergence on the internet once had — it would change business models, and eliminate intermediaries such as escrow agents and clerks,” said Vlad Martynov, an adviser for The Ethereum Foundation, a non-profit organization that backs the cryptocurrency. “If Russia implements it first, it will gain similar advantages to those the Western countries did at the start of the internet age.”

This article originally appeared at: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-06-06/putin-eyes-bitcoin-rival-to-spur-economic-growth-beyond-oil-gas?cmpid=socialflow-twitter-business&utm_content=buffer3d560&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkedin.com&utm_campaign=buffer.

Can China and the Internet Save American Small Business?

Business and nature will seek equilibrium. When China grows, they get rich and consumers want to buy more. 

Why not sell them something?


Can China and the Internet Save American Small Business?

The giant e-commerce platform Alibaba and its charismatic founder, Jack Ma, have a plan to add a million U.S. jobs by enticing American companies to sell to China.

by Emily Parker

week Jack Ma, the executive chairman of the online-commerce company Alibaba, went to Detroit to convince Americans that China and e-commerce could save small businesses. The Chinese billionaire paced around a huge stage, TED talk€“style, trying to inspire U.S. entrepreneurs to strive for greatness. Alibaba is not known for subtlety or understatement, and the event did not disappoint. Charlie Rose and Martha Stewart appeared onstage, as did a group of drummers suspended in midair.

Ma is right, in least in theory, to urge these businesses to consider China. By 2015, China’s online retail market was the largest in the world – 80percentbigger than that of the United States. Cross-border consumer e-commerce was valued at $40 billion. The opportunity is expanding. Within five years there could be more than 600 million people in China’s middle class. And thanks to the Internet, it’s easier than ever for U.S. companies to reach them. 

Just ask Veronica Pedersen, CEO of Timeless Skin Care, a family business based in Rancho Cucamonga, California. Timeless, which sells anti-aging serums and creams, works with a distributor to sell products to China on Alibaba’s Taobao Global shopping site. Last year Timeless brought in just under $5 million in revenue, according to the company, with sales in China accounting for more than half of that. Pedersen refers to her company as “mom-and-pop e-commerce.” Timeless, which has around 20 employees, is not aiming to conquer China. “If you are able to tap 1 percent of the Chinese market, you’re in business,” Pedersen says.

Alibaba claims to be the world’s largest retail commerce company, with annual revenue of nearly $23 billion. Last year, American goods ranked number two for imported products on Alibaba’s Tmall marketplace. Best-selling product categories include apparel, fresh food, mother and baby products, health supplements, and electronics. Many Chinese consumers are tired of worrying about food and product safety. They don’t want fake vitamins or dangerous baby products, and a U.S. label can signal quality. “The Chinese consumer is much more aware than American consumers of where everything is manufactured,” says Pedersen. “Our strategy in the Chinese market is about”Made in the USA.'”

Timeless is one of a handful of success stories that Alibaba showcased at its Gateway ’17 event in Detroit. The conference, which had some 3,000 attendees, was targeted at owners of small and medium-size businesses, as well as farmers, who want to learn more about how to sell their products to China. Keynotes and breakout sessions celebrated the Chinese opportunity and offered tips on how to sell on Alibaba.

Earlier this year Ma had told President Donald Trump that he intended to create a million U.S. jobs, and the event was a step toward fulfilling that promise. “If we can help one million small businesses online and each small business can create one job, we can create more than one million jobs,” Ma said in Detroit.

Getting all those small U.S. businesses onto Alibaba won’t be easy, and not for the reasons you’d think. Neither the Chinese nor the U.S. government is posing the biggest obstacles to Ma’s vision, at least for now. Instead, one of Alibaba’s key challenges will be to change the way Americans think about China – and about themselves. Americans will need to view China as a market and the U.S. as a seller, rather than the other way around. “U.S. companies have had the luxury of having a strong local market,” said Joshua Halpern, director of the eCommerce Innovation lab at the U.S. Department of Commerce. “So after building a brand in the U.S. your first step out of your house is not going to be to the largest, most challenging market in the world.”

Some of the small businesses at the conference seemed a little daunted. One attendee was Will Gee, CEO of Balti Virtual, a roughly 10-person Baltimore company that makes temporary, augmented-reality tattoos. Gee said the Alibaba conference opened his eyes to the possibility in China, as well as to “how complex an opportunity it is.” There’s “just so much to navigate,” he said, with details to figure out regarding “international trademarks, copyrights, all these different pieces of our business that I hadn’t really thought of as a small-business owner.” At the end of the conference, Gee was still open to exploring Alibaba, just not immediately.

The elephant in the conference center was the counterfeiting issue, which Ma himself referred to as a “cancer” that could kill his business. It’s unclear how many Americans are even aware of Alibaba, but those who are may have heard horror stories about small businesses hurt by Chinese fakes. Alibaba claims to be cracking down by getting companies to trademark their products before going on Tmall, responding quickly to reported violations, using algorithms to root out counterfeits, and showing zero tolerance for intellectual-property violations. What’s clear is that if Alibaba wants to succeed in the U.S., it will have to get this problem under control. 

Counterfeits are not the only challenge. Chinese consumers may like American products, but that doesn’t meant any U.S. product will sell. It helps if a brand has demonstrated success in its home market. Timeless Skin Care, for example, was highly rated on Amazon before venturing into China.

Alibaba likes to promote its staggering numbers – $547 billion in gross merchandise volume, 1.5 billion product listings – but those figures cut both ways. How does a small operation make a mark on such a massive platform? The answer is by making a significant investment, particularly in marketing. It’s important, for example, to tell Chinese consumers the story behind your brand. Frank Lavin, CEO of Export Now, which operates Chinese e-commerce stores for international companies, says one big mistake that U.S. companies make is thinking that they can just “show up” in China. 

Nor can a U.S. company afford to go it alone, at least right now. Last year Stadium Goods, a consignment sneaker business based in New York, started selling on Tmall Global, Alibaba’s cross-border e-commerce platform. John McPheters, CEO and cofounder of the company, says that China makes up 10 to 15 percent of its online business. Like other U.S. companies that sell on Tmall, Stadium Goods works with a third party (theirs is called Magic Panda) that handles things like customer service, marketing, logistics, and management for the brand’s Tmall storefront. McPheters has come to appreciate the power of Chinese social media. When I visited the Stadium Goods store in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City a week before the event, there were people broadcasting to online platforms in China. McPheters says that Stadium Goods has fewer than 50,000 followers on the microblogging service Weibo, but he has heard stories from China about “people that have relatively small following counts that can drive huge amounts of sales.” In the U.S., not so much. Stadium Goods has over 330,000 followers on Instagram, McPheters says, and if you post a photo, “you might sell a shoe or two.”

Truly succeeding on Tmall requires understanding the Chinese consumer mind-set. Customers may be willing to pay more for quality products, but they still love a good deal. McPheters says there’s a “video game” element to transactions in China, with an emphasis on coupons, discounting, and rewards that goes far beyond what you see in the U.S.

Skeptics will wonder if Alibaba’s small-business push is primarily a way to please Trump and build goodwill for the Chinese company’s U.S. ambitions. Alibaba’s payment affiliate Ant Financial, for example, is currently seeking to buy MoneyGram, an American payment processor. Ant Financial operates Alipay, a mobile payments system that has hundreds of millions of customers (See, Meet the Chinese Finance Giant That’s Secretly an AI Company.)

But Alibaba claims that its customers want products from smaller businesses because big brands alone no longer satisfy China’s aspirational class. Consumers “no longer buy in the traditional, massive consumption model,” says Alibaba Group vice president Jet Jing. “They want something which represents their taste and their style.” 

Small businesses already boost Alibaba’s bottom line, says Michael Zakkour, a vice president at the consulting firm Tompkins International, one of the sponsors of the Detroit event. “The reason Alibaba is going after small businesses globally is because their biggest money maker is Taobao, which is a marketplace for small businesses and individual merchants,” Zakkour says.

Ma says that Alibaba already has millions of small businesses using its online services, and that the company has already created more than 33 million Chinese jobs. The question is whether it can replicate this model in the U.S.. Companies that are doing well on Alibaba, like Timeless, claim to have already added staff to meet Chinese demand. The potential is there: America has a lot of things that Chinese people want to buy. Now Alibaba will have to persuade more small companies that the rewards of the Chinese market outweigh the risks.

 

This article originally appeared at: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/608161/can-china-and-the-internet-save-american-small-business/?set=608168&utm_source=MIT+Technology+Review&utm_campaign=c73f80500c-The_Download&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_997ed6f472-c73f80500c-154288857.