Quantcast
Channel: Business Insider
Viewing all 66342 articles
Browse latest View live

Tim Cook made over $15 million in 2018 — that's 283 times more than the median Apple employee earned (AAPL)

$
0
0

Tim Cook Happy

  • Apple revealed that CEO Tim Cook was paid $15,682,219 in 2018 in an SEC filing. 
  • That doesn't include $121 million in Apple stock that vested last year. 
  • The median Apple employee makes $55,426. 
  • Lots of Apple employees work in its retail stores and with AppleCare support and they factor into the median employee compensation calculation.

It's good to be Apple CEO Tim Cook.

The leader of the iPhone giant made over $15 million in 2018, according to a new filing with the SEC

That includes a base salary of $3 million, $12 million in incentives for hitting performance goals related to sales and operating income, and $294,082 to pay for Cook's private jet fare.

That's not including the massive stock incentives that Apple also provides to its chief executive as part of a 2011 grant. Cook cashed in $121 million of stock that vested earlier this year. Cook still has over 1.5 million Apple shares that haven't vested, worth about $189 million at the current share price. 

Apple also revealed on Tuesday how much money its median employee makes: $55,426. That means that of Apple's 132,000 total employees, half make less than that, and half make more. Lots of Apple employees work in its retail stores and with AppleCare and they factor into the median employee compensation.

For example, Facebook's median employee makes significantly more: Over $240,000 per year. But Facebook doesn't have retail or call center workers. 

Cook's compensation, not counting his restricted stock, is 283 times what the median Apple employee makes, according to the filing. Other Apple executives were also well-paid last year. CFO Luca Maestri, general counsel Kate Adams, retail head Angela Ahrendts, and COO Jeff Williams all made over $26 million each, according to the SEC filing. 

"We believe the compensation paid to our named executive officers for 2018 appropriately reflects and rewards their contribution to our performance," Apple states in the filing. 

Cook said in 2015 that he plans to give his entire fortune to charity. In 2018, he donated nearly $5 million in Apple stock to an unspecified charity, according to an SEC filing.

Screen Shot 2019 01 08 at 5.38.43 PM

SEE ALSO: Apple CEO Tim Cook is a few days away from a $120 million payday

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I cut Google out of my life for 2 weeks, but the alternatives prove why Google is so much better


27 engagement gifts under $100 for couples who don't have a registry yet

$
0
0

The Insider Picks team writes about stuff we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships, so we get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

grafomap, $49+

  • The holidays are the most popular time to get engaged, which means you can expect a good amount of engagement parties this time of year.
  • While gifting off a registry for a wedding is a pretty seamless process, choosing an engagement gift requires a little more nuance.
  • If you're not sure what to bring to your next engagement party, check out 27 great options below. 

If it seems like everyone around you is getting engaged right now, it's because they are. The holidays are peak engagement season, with Christmas being the most popular day to propose. If you've made this observation on Instagram recently, you'll likely have plenty of weddings to attend soon. Right now, though, you should probably expect a few engagement parties.

Picking out wedding gifts is easy. Couples can make a registry to let you know exactly what they actually want. Engagement parties are where gifting gets a little more complicated. How much should you spend? How do you know what they want? Do you even need to get them an engagement gift?

Engagement gift etiquette may be more nuanced, but we're going to try to make it easier for you. You don't need to spend a ton of money or make any grand gestures for an engagement party — just go for something small but sweet. So you don't show up at your next engagement party empty-handed, we rounded up 27 no-brainer options under $100. 

Keep reading for 27 great engagement gifts under $100:

A calendar

Brass Easel & Calendar, from $55, available at Artifact Uprising

They have a pretty big event coming up — help them count down to the wedding with this custom calendar featuring images you can upload from their social media pages.



A set of Champagne flutes

Personalized Champagne Flutes (set of 2), $49, available at Mark & Graham

Help them toast to the next chapter with these classy Champagne flutes. Each flute can be customized with up to 12 letters for an extra personal touch.



A Champagne cooler

Hammered Stainless-Steel Wine Bucket, $29.95, available at Williams Sonoma

They're probably going to get a lot of bubbly, and they're probably going to need somewhere to put it. Think ahead and gift them this classy wine bucket.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

22 fried desserts from around the world that you need to try

$
0
0

best packaged donuts hostess entenmanns little debbie_eating

  • Fried desserts are common around the world. 
  • In South America, many people eat tiny buñuelos, which symbolize good luck.
  • Beignets, a popular New Orleans specialty, originated in France.

Fried desserts are a common treat around the world. No matter how you make it or what you top it with, it seems like nearly every culture has a take on these sweet treats.

Below, you can get an idea of what fried treats look like around the world, and you'll probably feel inspired to add them all to your food bucket list.

In South America, many people eat tiny buñuelos, which symbolize good luck.

Buñuelos are bite-size dough balls popular in South American countries like Venezuela, Argentina, Belize, Bolivia, Colombia, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Mexico, as well as Spain, among other places. They are made with slightly different ingredients in each — in Mexico, for example, they're often served with a sweet syrup called piloncillo, while in Colombia they are usually made with cheese and are a traditional Christmas treat. They can be tricky to make, but they are said to be a symbol of good luck.



Bombolone is Italy's version of a doughnut.

Bombolone is round fried dough, usually filled with créme patissiére, chocolate, Nutella or jam. They are often topped with icing or powdered sugar — sort of similar to something like a jelly or Boston creme doughnut. They are made and eaten in various parts of Italy, although the ingredients change with the region.



People in Finland enjoy munkki, sometimes known as May Day doughnuts.

Munkki look just like jelly doughnuts, but they have more dough and a different flavor. They are actually made with cardamom and are known as a Vappu, a carnival at the start of spring, tradition. They are really popular on the eve of May Day.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Park rangers share fears of unemployment as national parks overflow with garbage during the government shutdown

$
0
0

park ranger shutdown

  • As the government shutdown goes on, some national park rangers are left wondering when they'll be able to return to work — and if they have the funds to support themselves in the interim.
  • Some rangers have taken on second jobs, while others are considering filing for unemployment.
  • Rangers say they love what they do, but the financial realities of being furloughed could force them to leave their careers behind.
  • We spoke to three rangers about how the shutdown is affecting them and the parks where they work.

As the United States endures the third week of a government shutdown, some federal employees are left wondering whether the time has come to seek a new job. 

In recent days, President Donald Trump has showed no sign of budging on his demands for a $5.7 billion border wall between the US and Mexico, which Democrats are determined to deny. At the end of last week, Trump suggested that the shutdown could last "months or even years."

Read more: Disturbing photos show national parks and monuments overflowing with garbage as the US government shutdown continues

If that happens, employees at national parks could be forced to leave their posts at a time when parks have been thrown into disarray. Days after the shutdown was announced, visitors uncovered bathrooms overflowing with human feces and trash spilling out of bins. 

"There are piles of human sh-t everywhere," a Yosemite National Park ranger said in a Facebook post, according to Outside Magazine. "Gross, but so seriously true. Every roadside turnout has toilet paper and trash."

Administrations during prior shutdowns have suspended all operations, including visitor access, at national parks. The Trump administration has opted to leave gates open to the public, with only certain federal employees around to provide emergency services.

"It has kind of become a free-for-all," said John Tillison, a retired park ranger with two decades of experience in the state of Washington.

The decision has led to a cascade of both partial and complete closures at some of the biggest parks across the country, including Yosemite and Joshua Tree National Park in Southern California.

'I did not plan for this'

Many park rangers are unsure when to expect their next paycheck, or whether they'll receive back pay for their time off. For those without savings, that could pose serious financial difficulties.

Gary Stellpflug has been working as a park ranger at Acadia National Park since the 1970s. He's now deciding whether to file for unemployment. 

Though he's been around for more than one government shutdown, Stellpflug was caught off guard by the latest news.

"For the most part, I think folks were surprised," he said, speaking as a private citizen. "I did not plan for this."

national parks shutdown

Another National Park Service employee at a park in the Southwest, who wished to remain anonymous so she could speak frankly, said she'd "learned to be pretty detached" after witnessing multiple shutdowns.

"I've been working for federal service for almost five years and I have an emergency savings account," she said. "One of those emergencies is a shutdown."

The employee recalled the 2013 shutdown over the Affordable Care Act, which drove volunteers and interns at her park to leave after a week. When the park reopened after 17 days, many staffers were gone, she said. 

The impact of the current shutdown is different since employees are allowed to stay in their onsite housing, but Tillison said minimum-wage and seasonal employees may have a tough time holding on.

Stellpflug said he knows a few colleagues who have resorted to taking second jobs. While he has enough savings for now, those living paycheck to paycheck "are probably worried," he said. 

"We were always told that we got paid in sunrises and sunsets,"said Tillison, who described a park ranger's salary as "modest at best."  

Rangers are eager to return to work

If there's one thing that furloughed park rangers tend to agreed on, it's their desire to get back to work. 

"None of us took our jobs to get rich,"Sharon Stiteler, a park ranger at the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area, wrote in an editorial for the Chicago Tribune. "We are public servants who love what we do. We are incredibly frustrated that we can't do a fair day's work for a fair day's pay."

The park employee in the Southwest echoed this sentiment.

"I really love my job and I would do everything I could to come back to it...but I've got to eat," she told Business Insider.

If the latest shutdown lasts for several months, the employee said she would have to consider other ways of earning income. If she went looking for a job now, she said, she might not be able to accept it while on furlough. 

"Everybody's really tired of riding the roller coaster," said Tillison. "There's a lot of frustration, and rightfully so."

Rangers want the shutdown to end or the parks to close

Over the weekend, Trump said he could "relate" to the plight of furloughed workers. 

"I'm sure the people that are on the receiving end will make adjustments," Trump told reporters as he left the White House. "Many of those people that won't be receiving a paycheck, many of those people agree 100% with what I'm doing."

joshua tree closed

But the decision to leave national parks open has bewildered visitors and park rangers across the country. 

"My whole community is affected by this," said the park employee in the Southwest. "It creates a lot of stressful decision-making and visitor confusion."

She added: "I think everyone is in agreement it would be a lot better if we just closed the park during the shutdown."

Stellpflug, on the other hand, suggested that politics shouldn't interfere with whether the parks stay open.

"I would hope there would be a way to get parks open that's not related to [border] wall issues," he said. 

On Sunday, the National Park Service announced that it would use entrance fees to help staff the parks as the shutdown continues. The staffers would help clean restrooms, patrol the parks, and pick up trash.

Some Democrats and conservationists have opposed the decision, arguing that it is misguided — and potentially illegal — to divert funds. The Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act states that entrance fees should be used for visitor services as opposed to operations.

"Diverting this money will dig our parks into an even bigger financial hole," said Theresa Pierno, president of the National Parks Conservation Association, in a statement on the group's website. "This will hurt rangers, parks, visitors and the tourism economy long after the shutdown is over."

For Tillison, it's sad to see the damage to a tradition that first started in America.

"Yellowstone [National Park in Wyoming] was the first national park in the world," he said. "It kind of feels like [the parks] are being held hostage for political gain."

"When this is all said and done," he said, "the rangers are going to come back and have messes to clean up and resources to protect."

Do you have a national parks shutdown story? Email the author at abendix@businessinsider.com.

Ariel Schwartz contributed reporting to this story.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's how many children you can have in a lifetime

One of the hottest coaching prospects in football bailed on USC just a month after being announced so he could take over for the Arizona Cardinals

$
0
0

kliff kingsbury

  • The Arizona Cardinals have hired Kliff Kingsbury as their new head coach.
  • Kingsbury became a surprisingly hot coaching candidate in recent weeks, despite having joined USC as an offensive coordinator in December.
  • Kingsbury spent six years as head coach at Texas Tech, developing a reputation for running efficient offenses that benefitted quarterbacks, despite also posting a losing record while there.

The Arizona Cardinals are finalizing a contract to hire Kliff Kingsbury as their next head coach, as first reported by NFL Network's Peter Schrager.

Kingsbury has had a whirlwind few months, first being fired by Texas Tech in November, getting hired by USC as an offensive coordinator in December, then becoming one of the hottest coaching prospects seemingly out of nowhere.

Kingsbury went 35-40 in six seasons with Texas Tech but made a name for himself by working with several big-name quarterbacks, including Patrick Mahomes, Baker Mayfield (who later transferred to Oklahoma after being surpassed as the starter), and Davis Webb. His teams were efficient on offense, and his quarterbacks were known to put up big numbers.

It's unclear, however, how exactly Kingsbury became one of the biggest coaching candidates — he also interviewed with the New York Jets. According to the Cardinals' official press release announcing the hire, the New England Patriots would have considered Kingsbury for offensive coordinator if current OC Josh McDaniels got a head-coaching job.

Kingsbury was announced as the offensive coordinator of USC on December 5. When teams reached out to USC to interview Kingsbury, they were reportedly blocked. The NFL mandates that teams respect candidates being blocked for interviews.

However, Pro Football Talk's Mike Florio reported that multiple sources believed Kingsbury would just buy out his contract with USC to enter the coaching pool. Kingsbury's buyout number was not believed to be high, according to Florio.

Kingsbury spent just over one month with the school.

Kingsbury was believed to be a coveted candidate because of his work with quarterbacks and ability to coach a spread offense. The Cardinals' press release announcing the hire included that Kingsbury is friends with Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay, considered the NFL's best offensive mind, and was offered a job with the Rams for their stretch run, but ultimately chose USC.

Read more: Here's when the Super Bowl starts where you live — and how you can watch it live online

Kingsbury will now work with second-year quarterback Josh Rosen, who has shown promise but struggled in his rookie year. The Cardinals also have the top pick in the 2019 NFL draft.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I went on Beyoncé's 22-day diet — and I lost 15 pounds

Sears chairman Eddie Lampert has a net worth of $1 billion — from a $130 million yacht to a home on 'billionaire bunker' island, here's how he spends his fortune

$
0
0

Edward Lampert

  • Eddie Lampert, the chairman and former CEO of Sears, has an estimated net worth of $1 billion.
  • Lampert owns three homes, including one on the wealthy "Billionaire Bunker" island in Florida, and also owns a $130 million yacht.
  • Lampert is a member of the ultra-exclusive Skull and Bones society at Yale University.
  • In 2003, he was kidnapped and held at gunpoint — only to negotiate his way free.

Eddie Lampert, the chairman and former CEO of Sears, has had an eventful career.

With an estimated net worth of $1 billion, Lampert was once hailed as a genius hedge-fund manager and the next Warren Buffett. He's a member of Yale's ultra-exclusive Skull and Bones secret society, along with three former presidents, and his college roommate was eventual US Secretary of Treasury Steven Mnuchin.

He also managed to save Kmart from bankruptcy in the early 2000s, but not before he was kidnapped and held at gunpoint for 30 hours in a Connecticut hotel. He reportedly talked his captors into releasing him, then capped off the Kmart deal a week later.

Now, after Lampert merged Kmart with Sears, the department store is now on the brink of liquidation.

Lampert has garnered criticism for his management of Sears, which he reportedly runs from his sprawling, $38 million estate in a wealthy Florida community known as "billionaire bunker." The wealthy executive also owns houses in Connecticut and Colorado, not to mention a $130 million yacht.

Read on to see how Sears' embattled chairman made — and spends — his $1 billion fortune.

SEE ALSO: Sears is getting one last chance to save itself from oblivion

DON'T MISS: Inside Sears' death spiral: How an iconic American brand has been driven to the edge of bankruptcy

Eddie Lampert, 56, is the chairman of Sears Holdings, the company that owns Sears and Kmart.

Source: Forbes



Lampert's net worth is an estimated $1 billion, and he hasn't been shy about spending: He owns three sprawling homes and a $130 million yacht.

Source: Business Insider



But Lampert wasn't always this wealthy. Although he grew up in an affluent family in Roslyn, New York, life changed at age 14 when his father, a successful attorney, died of a heart attack. Lampert helped his family make ends meet by taking jobs at warehouses stocking shelves and packing boxes.

Source:CNN



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

In 2018 alone, new EU regulations incurred an onslaught of rules and reporting — here's how regtech can address these new requirements

$
0
0

Growth Regtech Firms

This is a preview of a research report from Business Insider Intelligence, Business Insider's premium research service. To learn more about Business Insider Intelligence, click here.

Regtech solutions seemed to offer the solution to financial institutions' (FIs) compliance woes when they first came to prominence around 24 months ago, gaining support from regulators and investors alike. 

However, many of the companies offering these solutions haven't scaled as might have been expected from the initial hype, and have failed to follow the trajectory of firms in other segments of fintech.

This unexpected inertia in the regtech industry is likely to resolve over the next 12-18 months as other factors come into play that shift FIs' approach to regtech solutions, and as the companies offering them evolve. External factors driving this change include regulatory support of regtech solutions, and consultancies offering more help to FIs wanting to sift through solutions. Startups offering regtech solutions will also play a part by partnering with each other, forming industry organizations, and taking advantage of new opportunities.

This report from Business Insider Intelligence, Business Insider's premium research service, provides a brief overview of the current global financial regulatory compliance landscape, and the regtech industry's position within it. It then details the major drivers that will shift the dial on FIs' adoption of regtech over the next 12-18 months, as well as those that will propel startups offering regtech solutions to new heights. Finally, it outlines what impact these drivers will have, and gives insight into what the global regtech industry will look like by 2020.

Here are some of the key takeaways:

  • Regulatory compliance is still a significant issue faced by global FIs. In 2018 alone, EU regulations MiFID II and PSD2 have come into effect, bringing with them huge handbooks and gigantic reporting requirements. 
  • Regtech startups boast solutions that can ease FIs' compliance burden — but they are struggling to scale. 
  • Some changes expected to drive greater adoption of these solutions in the next 12 to 18 months are: the ongoing evolution of startups' business models, increasing numbers of partnerships, regulators' promotion of regtech, changing attitudes to the segment among FIs, and consultancies helping to facilitate adoption.
  • FIs will actively be using solutions from regtech startups by 2020, and startups will be collaborating in an organized fashion with each other and with FIs. Global regulators will have adopted regtech themselves, while continuing to act as advocates for the industry.

In full, the report:

  • Reviews the major changes expected to hit the regtech segment in the next 12 to 18 months.
  • Examines the drivers behind these changes, and how the proliferation of regtech will improve compliance for FIs.
  • Provides our view on what the future of the regtech industry looks like through 2020.

     

Join the conversation about this story »

Verizon is blasting AT&T for its 5GE branding strategy — but it could be a savvy move that topples Verizon's dominance

$
0
0

Former Ericsson CEO Hans Vestberg

  • Verizon is blasting AT&T for displaying a 5GE logo on its phones.
  • 5GE stands for 5G Evolution and is not equivalent to the 5G standard.
  • The strategy could unseat Verizon’s network dominance this year, according to analyst Walter Piecyk.

Verizon is blasting AT&T for marketing its LTE Advanced network by displaying '5GE' logos on its devices.

5GE stands for 5G Evolution and AT&T says this service will offer faster speeds, with actual speeds of 40 megabits per second that could peak at 400 mbps. That's double the speed of its LTE network. Still, it's not the peak of 1.2 gigabits per second that AT&T has said its 5G network will be able to access.

In a note posted online Monday titled "When we say '5G,' we mean 5G," Verizon chief technology officer Kyle Malady urged the industry to avoid such behavior. Verizon also made the same point with full-page ads in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and USA Today on Tuesday. AT&T isn't mentioned by name, but the Verizon ads are a clear shot at their wireless competitor.

"If network providers, equipment manufacturers, handset makers, app developers and others in the wireless ecosystem engage in behavior designed to purposefully confuse consumers, public officials and the investment community about what 5G really is, we risk alienating the very people we want most to join in developing and harnessing this exciting new technology," Malady wrote in the note.

The indicator on 5GE-capable smart phones lets customers know when they are receiving that enhanced wireless experience, a spokesperson for AT&T told Business Insider.

It's more than just industry altruism that's behind Verizon's call for precision in branding 5G products.

AT&T's marking strategy could unseat Verizon’s network dominance this year, BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk wrote on Monday.The media and telco giant is adding 60 MHz of new spectrum to its network this year that could result in noticeable speed and performance improvements for customers, according to Piecyk.

"The broad availability of real 5G' could be years away, providing AT&T with a window of opportunity to surpass Verizon’s historical dominance as the wireless network leader in the United States," he wrote.

Read more: The CEO of Charter is on the lookout for cable deals, and he just took a swing at Verizon's plan to disrupt his business

There seems to be no shortage of mobile competitors in 2019.

Along with AT&T, T-Mobile is also making improvements to its network, and Piecyk predicts it could take share from Verizon in the coming year. Cable is also a relatively new entrant in the space. Both Charter and Comcast have mobile offering for consumers.

"If AT&T can outperform in its wireless business ... we believe this could drive a tightening of AT&T’s dividend yield relative to Verizon, particularly if AT&T’s success was a result of taking Verizon wireless subscribers," Piecyk wrote.

So far, that share stealing doesn't appear to have occurred.

At an investor conference on Tuesday, Ronan Dunne, head of Verizon Wireless, shared early fourth quarter figures for postpaid additions. Dunne said Verizon added 1.2 million retail postpaid net additions, of which about 650,000 were phone net additions.

SEE ALSO: Channel blackouts have exploded over the last decade — and Verizon could be the big winner as pay TV customers look for other options

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 7 science-backed ways to a happier and healthier 2019 that you can do the first week of the new year


Former caregiver of the nursing home patient who gave birth while in a vegetative state says she never could have given consent, and an ex-manager claims the company covered up another sexually inappropriate incident

$
0
0

former hacienda healthcare caregiver

  • On Monday, a person spoke to ABC 15, claiming to be the former caregiver of a woman who gave birth at an Arizona nursing home late last month.
  • The former caregiver described the patient's condition in detail and said that she could not possibly have given consent to sexual intercourse, because she has been in a vegetative state for more than a decade.
  • CBS affiliate Arizona's Family also spoke to a former Hacienda Skilled Nursing Facility manager on Tuesday, who claimed that the company's former CEO covered up another sexually inappropriate incident.
  • Former CEO Bill Timmons resigned on Monday. He did not respond to INSIDER's request for comment.

Two people claiming to be former employees of Hacienda Healthcare have spoken out to detail what the nursing home and its parent company are like after a patient's surprise pregnancy and birth sparked a sexual assault investigation.

Phoenix, Arizona police have launched an investigation after the unnamed patient, described by Arizona's Family as a 29-year-old Native American woman, gave birth to a baby boy on December 29. The birth was a shock since the patient has been in a vegetative state for more than a decade due to a near-drowning incident.

On Monday, a person claiming to have been one of the patient's primary caregivers for many years sat down for an interview with ABC 15, saying there's no way the woman could have given consent. INSIDER was not able to independently verify the person's employment at Hacienda.

hacienda healthcare

The former caregiver, who asked to remain anonymous, said the patient couldn't walk or communicate in any way. Her life is split between her bedroom and another room where she's taken by wheelchair to spend her days, the woman told ABC 15.

The caregiver told the outlet that the staff at the facility are pretty much the only human contact the patient has, as her family only visits once every few months.

When she heard that the woman had given birth, the caregiver said she cried because she knew that the woman could not defend herself or identify her assailant. The caregiver was also incensed at the facility's staff, who she says should have noticed her gaining weight or missing periods.

"I can't believe it at all. I can't believe someone would bathe her daily for nine months, never know she wasn't having her period, she wasn't growing in her mid-section. That nurses weren't keeping track of her weight, those things are just shocking to me," the caregiver told ABC 15.

When the caregiver worked at the facility, she alleges lax security left the patients vulnerable.

"Too many entrances, too many opportunities. I myself have come in a back way many times with no one noticing me," the caregiver said.

Read more:An Arizona nursing home CEO resigned after a woman in a vegetative state for 14 years gave birth

Multiple reports emerge of other inappropriate incidents at the facility

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, a woman claiming to have worked in a management position at Hacienda for more than a decade spoke to CBS affiliate Arizona's Family, and claimed the company's recently resigned president covered up another sexually inappropriate incident in 1998.

The woman, who also asked to remain anonymous, says she was shocked when she learned of the pregnancy last week.

"My heart stopped when I heard the news from my daughter. I was just horrified. I was going, 'No! Not Hacienda,'" the woman told reporter Briana Whitney.

former hacienda healthcare manager

But during her time working at Hacienda, she says she witnessed one particularly troubling incident.

In 1998, the woman says she was pulled into a closed-door managers' meeting with then-CEO Bill Timmons. In the meeting, she says she was briefed on an incident that happened, in which female nurses had gathered around a non-verbal male patient's bed and made inappropriate comments about his genitalia.

"The poor guy was just laying (sic) there. He couldn't say anything. He couldn't communicate, he couldn't defend himself," she recalled to CBS 5. "We were talking about reporting it to CPS (now known as Department of Child Safety) and Bill Timmons slammed his fist on the table and said, 'No! No one is going to report this.'"

The woman says the incident was never reported to the proper authorities, and she was left "horrified."

Timmons was Hacienda Healthcare's CEO for 28 years, according to The New York Times. He only became the facility's president on January 1, the Arizona Republic reported.

He resigned on Monday, in response to the scandal.

After Timmons resigned, Hacienda released the following statement:

"As an organization, Hacienda HealthCare stands fully committed to getting to the truth of what, for us, represents an unprecedented matter. We are already conducting a comprehensive internal review of our processes, protocols, and people to ensure that every single Hacienda resident is as safe and well cared for as possible. Anything less than that is unacceptable to our team, our company's leaders and the communities we serve."

INSIDER also uncovered state records of two other disturbing reports at the facility.

In one case, the Arizona Department of Health Services cited the company in 2017 for an incident in which a certified nursing assistant walked in on a male patient while he was showering. And in another case Arizona DHS investigated in 2013, a staffer was fired for making inappropriate sexual comments about multiple patients.

Hacienda and Timmons didn't immediately respond to INSIDER's requests for comment on Tuesday.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I went on Beyoncé's 22-day diet — and I lost 15 pounds

The Trump administration keeps getting called out for misleadingly linking migrants at the US-Mexico border with terrorism

$
0
0

donald trump

  • The Trump administration has sparked backlash in recent days over several false or misleading statements connecting migrants at the US-Mexico border with terrorism.
  • Trump said Friday that terrorists are "coming through the southern border because they find that's probably the easiest place to come through."
  • But government data shows that just six "known or suspected terrorists" entered the US that way — it's far more common that they arrive in airports, or even through the Canadian border.
  • President Donald Trump's senior adviser, Kellyanne Conway, even conceded that Trump administration officials had erred in their statistics. "Everybody makes mistakes — all of us," she said.

The Trump administration has come under fire in recent days for falsely claiming that 4,000 "known or suspected terrorists" were arrested crossing the US-Mexico border last year. In reality, just six were stopped in the first half of 2018.

The exaggeration didn't end there — President Donald Trump himself appeared in the White House's Rose Garden on Friday to talk up his proposed border wall and tell reporters that terrorists are streaming through the US-Mexico border.

"I talk about human traffickers, I talk about drugs and gangs, but a lot of people don't say we have terrorists coming through the southern border because they find that's probably the easiest place to come through," he said.

Readmore: Trump goes off the rails in freewheeling news conference raging about the shutdown, the border wall, DACA, and Democrats

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen backed him up, saying 3,000 "special interest aliens" with potential terror links were arrested at the southern border.

But reporters quickly pushed back, noting that "special interest aliens" aren't terrorists, and they're not even on the terror watchlist. In many cases, they're travelers coming into the US from countries with a history of terror attacks, or people whose travel patterns are deemed "suspicious," according to the Department of Homeland Security's own definition.

But the incident sparked something of a trend, with Trump administration officials repeatedly making outlandish or hyperbolic statements about terrorism at the southern border that haven't held up to scrutiny.

A 'sensitive' number of terror-watchlisted migrants

kirstjen nielsen donald trump

Nielsen was met with mockery and skepticism on Monday after tweeting that a growing number of known and suspected terrorists are reaching the southern border, but refusing to say how many.

"The threat is real. The number of terror-watchlisted encountered at our Southern Border has increased over the last two years," she said. "The exact number is sensitive and details about these cases are extremely sensitive."

Critics derided the tweets, noting that US Customs and Border Protection has already provided that data to Congress, and the numbers were small.

NBC News reported Monday that the data provided to Congress revealed that just 132 known or suspected terrorists were intercepted at American borders in the first half of fiscal year 2018. Of those, 91 were stopped at the US-Canada border, and just 41 were stopped at the US-Mexico border.

Of those 41 at the southern border, 35 were already US citizens. Just six immigrants identified as known or suspected terrorists were blocked from crossing the US-Mexico border in the first half of 2018.

Nielsen argued that even a small number of suspected terrorists was significant.

"I am sure all Americans would agree that one terrorist reaching our borders is one too many,"she tweeted. "These are just the terror suspects we know about who reach our border."

Where the 4,000 'known or suspected terrorists' figure came from

sarah huckabee sanders

Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders was also challenged on Sunday by Fox News host Chris Wallace, after she said nearly 4,000 known or suspected terrorists enter the US illegally, and "our most vulnerable point of entry is at our southern border."

Wallace cut her off, correcting that the vast majority of those individuals never came near the southern border.

"Do you know where those 4,000 people come from? Where they are captured?" Wallace said. "Airports."

The Trump administration has sought to walk back some of its claims in the wake of the backlash. Kellyanne Conway, Trump's senior adviser, conceded Monday evening to Fox News host Laura Ingraham that the 4,000 figure hadn't referred to migrants at the southern border.

"Doesn't that hurt the credibility of the White House when they don't get the facts right, and someone's not doing their homework in the way they describe it?" Ingraham asked Conway.

"It got unfortunately confused by my colleague," Conway said. "Everybody makes mistakes — all of us. The fact is, it's corrected here. And anybody who turns a blind eye to the actual numbers of the human trafficking, the increase in the drugs — we are concerned about your children here in the United States being subjected to all these drugs, and we're concerned about their children not making these perilous journeys.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: MSNBC host Chris Hayes thinks President Trump's stance on China is 'not at all crazy'

Verizon's CEO just walked back on the company's original premise for buying Yahoo

$
0
0

axios

  • Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg says the telecom company's media unit will have to make money without leveraging data from the company's wireless and wireline subscribers.
  • Vestberg says the former AOL and Yahoo businesses "need to survive on their merits."

Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg isn't ready to ditch the telecom company's media unit, but he tells Axios it will have to make money without leveraging data from the company's wireless and wireline subscribers.

Why it matters: This is a sharp departure from the company's original premise for buying Yahoo and AOL: that Verizon could use its detailed data on subscribers to take on Google and Facebook, which together dominate digital advertising.

In an interview with Axios, Vestberg says the former AOL and Yahoo businesses "need to survive on their merits."

  • Though he's mostly focused on 5G and the company's massive wireless and wireline businesses, Vestberg says he sees potential in the content operation.
  • Content is particularly strong in parts of Yahoo's operations in sports, finance and entertainment, which lend themselves to video programming, he says.
  • But he adds the company will prioritize the responsibilities it has to those paying it for network services.

"We're not trying to mimic a Facebook or Google. We don’t think that's the right way to do that."

— Hans Vestberg

By the numbers: Verizon doesn't break out the profitability of its media business, but it said in November that the unit wouldn't meet its goal of becoming a $10 billion-a-year business by 2021.

  • Vestberg, who has been Verizon CEO for less than a year after 28 at Ericsson, says it's too soon to determine if there may be divestitures within the media business.

He has already started making other changes. Late last year, Vestberg implemented a strategy he calls "Verizon 2.0." The effort includes:

  • Shaking up the company's leadership ranks.
  • Reorganizing into 3 businesses: consumer, business and Verizon Media Group.
  • Outsourcing a chunk of the company's IT operations to Infosys.
  • Accepting voluntary buyouts from more than 10,000 workers.

Why? The changes are designed to help the company fully take advantage of the next generation of cellular technology. 5G is just starting to reach consumers, but over time has the potential to create whole new lines of business.

  • One of the earliest opportunities is to take the kind of network that Verizon is building for itself and sell a version to large businesses looking to speed up and automate their own corporate campuses, according to Vestberg.
  • Additional opportunities range from health care to smart cities, as 5G networks become more advanced and ubiquitous. Those areas require lots of wireless spectrum, dense networks and fiber — all of which Verizon has, he says.

One area where Verizon still has room to improve, Vestberg notes, is to take a more active role in the businesses that are built using its high-speed connections.

  • "Much of the innovation came on top of the network in 4G," he says. Customers still benefitted, but he would like to see Verizon get more involved this time around.
  • That doesn't necessarily mean the company needs to build every product, but "we need to be part of that innovation."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I went on Beyoncé's 22-day diet — and I lost 15 pounds

30 movies we're most excited about in 2019

$
0
0

tessa thompson chris hemsworth men in black

Disney may have a big year at theaters this year with four sequels, but there are a lot of other movies we're looking forward to in 2019.

INSIDER went through more than 100 movies that are coming out this year and rounded up the top 30 you should keep an eye on. Get ready for a lot of sequels and reboots, including a fourth "Men in Black," more Stephen King-inspired thrillers, a "Fast & Furious" spin-off featuring the Rock, and a sci-fi thriller from James Gunn ("Guardians of the Galaxy") and two of his brothers. 

Keep reading to see the movies we can't wait to see in 2019.

1. "Glass"

Release date: Friday, January 18, 2019

What it's about: The sequel to M. Night Shyamalan's breakout "Split" is also a direct sequel to "Unbreakable.""Glass" introduces a mysterious psychiatrist, Dr. Ellie Staple (Sarah Paulson), who tries to convince Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy), David Dunn (Bruce Willis), and Elijah/Mr. Glass (Samuel L. Jackson) that they do not have superpowers, and boy is that mistake.

Why to see it: "Glass" is the only January release we're really excited about, because we'll get to see Willis and Jackson reunited. We're ready to see both of them interact with McAvoy who carried "Split" for his standout performance playing over a dozen different personalities.

Watch the trailer here



2. "The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part"

Release date: Friday, February 8, 2019

What it's about: Five years after the first film, invaders from outer space capture Lucy (Elizabeth Banks) and it's up to Emmet to leave Bricksburg and save her.

Why we're excited: Both "The LEGO Movie" and its spin-off, "The LEGO Batman Movie," were fantastic. Original directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller wrote and produced the sequel. Part of their charm is that the duo don't follow conventional movie-making rules. Look at the title of this movie. Chris Pratt is voicing a character which is a spoof of both his "Jurassic World" and "Guardians of the Galaxy" characters in addition to his main character, Emmet. That's part of what makes most of their movies so fun to watch. (Have you seen "Spider-Verse"? Enough said.)

We're ready to see more of Will Arnett's tiny, egotistical Batman and the return of Jonah Hill's Green Lantern. Jason Momoa is supposed to reprise his role as Aquaman in Lego form, too. We're slightly concerned since the movie was pushed back from a 2018 release, but here's to hoping everything in the sequel is even more awesome. 

Watch a trailer here



3. "How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World"

Release date: February 22, 2019

What's it's about: The conclusion to the franchise sees Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and his dragon pal Toothless discover a vibrant, hidden dragon world and a group of very bad men try to steal the dragons.

Why it's a must-see: There are two big films for kids coming out in February and fans have been waiting four years for the next adventure of Hiccup and Toothless. The franchise notably champions those with prosthetics, inspiring that no limitation should prevent any one person from accomplishing great things, even ruling a group of Vikings.

Early buzz around the third film is that it's just as good, if not better than, the others. If you can't wait to see Kit Harington on the final season of "Game of Thrones," he reprises his character, Eret, here. You may want to bring some tissues along.

Watch a trailer here.

 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

10 of the wildest things airport employees have seen on the job

$
0
0

bridesmaids airplane

  • There are lots of steps that go into getting on a plane.
  • Lots of things can happen between the departures gates and boarding the plane.
  • Airplane employees share what they have seen.

The airport can be an adventure even when you're just flying. But from going through airport security to boarding, the employees who work in the airport have really seen everything (and sometimes even documented their experiences).

We took to Reddit to find out some of the weirdest things airport employees have seen while on the clock. Although INSIDER cannot independently verify these claims, these stories are still highly amusing to read.

"There was a man sitting on a bench out front, with an apocalyptic-looking storm bearing down on us, wind whipping everywhere, just soulfully playing the trombone."

"I work at my local airport (I live on a tiny island and this airport is smaller than our library), and just last summer we had a hurricane looming down on us. Everyone is getting packed up to evacuate, we're renting cars like crazy to people fleeing and we're trying to get them out of the storm area. No idea where he came from or what he was doing but it was surreal. Like something out of a David Lynch film.

"I was out checking on the cars we had and when I walked back up there was a man sitting on a bench out front, with an apocalyptic-looking storm bearing down on us, wind whipping everywhere, just soulfully playing the trombone." - DomLite



"Rolled in place for maybe a minute before someone shut the thing off."

"Watched an older woman tumble down the 'up' escalator. Every time she flipped over she yelled 'I'm OK' like Filburt from Rocko's Modern Life. Flop. 'I'm OK.' Flop. 'I'm OK.' Flop. 'I'm OK.' Rolled in place for maybe a minute before someone shut the thing off." - Streder



"She exclaimed, 'My bloody brother, I'll kill him!'"

"A school friend's father worked on Passport Control in the mid-'80s. In those days passports were often handwritten and had spaces for things like 'distinguishing features.' One day a young woman presented her passport to him, and he opened it and compared the photo... and then paused before saying, 'This is a bit unusual.' He showed her the open passport which read in part: 'Distinguishing Features: BIG T---.' She exclaimed, 'My bloody brother, I'll kill him!'" - Flupsy



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A new Intuit survey says 68% of SMBs use an average of four apps to run their businesses — here's how they're choosing payment providers

$
0
0

The App Marketplace

In an increasingly digitized world, brick-and-mortar retailers are facing immense pressure to understand and accommodate their customers’ changing needs, including at the point of sale (POS). 

More than two years after the EMV liability shift in October 2015, most large merchants globally have upgraded their payment systems. And beyond upgrading to meet new standards, many major retailers are adopting full-feature, “smart” devices — and supplementing them with valuable tools and services — to help them better engage customers and build loyalty.

But POS solutions aren’t “one size fits all.” Small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) don't usually have the same capabilities as larger merchants, which often have the resources and funds to adopt robust solutions or develop them in-house. That's where app marketplaces come in: POS app marketplaces are platforms, typically deployed by POS providers, where developers can host third-party business apps that offer back-office services, like accounting and inventory, and customer-retention tools, like loyalty programs and coupons.

SMBs' growing needs present a huge opportunity for POS terminal providers, software providers, and resellers. The US counts roughly 8 million SMBs, or 99.7% of all businesses. Until now, constraints such as time and budget have made it difficult for SMBs to implement value-added services that meet their unique needs. But app marketplaces enable providers to cater to SMBs with specialized solutions. 

App marketplaces also alleviate some of the issues associated with the overcrowded payments space. Relatively new players that have effectively leveraged the rise of the digital economy, like mPOS firm Square, are increasingly encroaching on the payments industry, putting pricing pressure on payment hardware and service giants. This has diminished client loyalty as merchants seek out the most affordable solution, and it's resulted in lost revenue for providers. However, app marketplaces can be used as tools not only to build client loyalty, but also as a revenue booster — Verifone, for instance, charges developers 30% of net revenue for each installed app and a distribution fee for each free app.

In this report, Business Insider Intelligence looks at the drivers of POS app marketplaces and the legacy and challenger firms that are supplying them. The report also highlights the strategies these providers are employing, and the ways that they can capitalize on the emergence of this new market. Finally, it looks to the future of POS app marketplaces, and how they may evolve moving forward.

Here are some of the key takeaways from the report:

  • SMBs are a massive force in the US, which makes understanding their needs a necessity for POS terminal providers, software providers, and resellers — the US counts roughly 8 million SMBs, or 99.7% of all businesses.
  • The entrance of new challengers into the payment space has put pricing pressure on the entire industry, forcing all of the players in the industry to find new solutions to keep customers loyal while also gaining a new revenue source.
  • Major firms in the industry, like Verifone and Ingenico, have turned to value-added services, specifically app marketplaces, to not only build loyalty but also giving them a new revenue source — Verifone charges developers 30% of net revenue for each installed app and a distribution fee for each free app.
  • According to a recent survey by Intuit, 68% of SMBs stated that they use an average of four apps to run their businesses. As developers flock to the space to grab a piece of the pie, it's likely that increased competition will lead to robust, revenue-generating marketplaces.
  • And there are plenty of opportunities to build out app marketplace capabilities, such as in-person training, to further engage with users — 66% of app users would hire someone to train and educate them on which apps are right for their businesses. 

In full, the report:

  • Identifies the factors that have changed how SMBs are choosing payment providers.  
  • Discusses why firms in the payments industry have started to introduce app marketplaces over the last four years.
  • Analyzes some of the most popular app marketplaces in the industry and identifies the strengths of each.
  • Breaks down the concerns merchants have relating to app marketplaces, and discusses how providers can solve these issues.
  • Explores what app marketplace providers will have to do going forward in order to avoid being outperformed in an industry that's becoming increasingly saturated. 

Subscribe to an All-Access pass to Business Insider Intelligence and gain immediate access to:

This report and more than 250 other expertly researched reports
Access to all future reports and daily newsletters
Forecasts of new and emerging technologies in your industry
And more!
Learn More

Purchase & download the full report from our research store

 

Join the conversation about this story »

The best robot we saw at CES 2019

$
0
0

Coral One robot vacuum

  • The Coral One vacuum is the best robot I saw at this year's CES.
  • It can vacuum a floor without human input by using sensors to detect obstacles and create a map of your home.
  • Unlike a Roomba or other robot vacuums, the Coral One has a detachable component that allows for manual vacuuming of elevated or hard-to-reach surfaces. 
  • The Coral One's biggest downside is its $599 price tag (you can buy a robot vacuum for less than half of that).

The Coral One vacuum is far from the flashiest robot at this year's International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), but it's the one I'd most like to own.

Read more: 17 of the wackiest photos from the biggest tech convention of the year

Like a Roomba, the Coral One can vacuum a floor without human input by using sensors to detect obstacles and create a map of your home. But unlike a Roomba or other robot vacuums, the Coral One has a detachable component that allows for manual vacuuming of elevated or hard-to-reach surfaces. 

Coral One robot vacuum

A robot vacuum that includes a manual vacuum may not sound as exciting as a robot that can dance, play ping-pong, or play rock-paper-scissors (all of which are on display at this year's CES), but its benefits are more practical. The Coral One's biggest downside is its $599 price tag (you can buy a robot vacuum for less than half of that), but there's no robot I saw at CES 2019 I'd rather own.

What it is: Coral One robot vacuum

Who makes it: Coral

Why it's the best: Many robots I saw at CES had impressive capabilities, but didn't seem very practical. The Coral One is useful for almost anyone.

Where and when you can get it: Coral's website

How much it will cost: $599

ces 2019 graphic

SEE ALSO: The best car we saw at CES 2019

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: China made an artificial star that's 6 times as hot as the sun, and it could be the future of energy


The best new transportation we saw at CES 2019

$
0
0

Bell Nexus

  • Bell Helicopter unveiled a verticial-takeoff-and-landing air taxi vehicle, called the Bell Nexus, at this year's International Consumer Electronics Show (CES).
  • Bell has partnered with Uber to design aircraft for Uber's upcoming flying taxi service.
  • The Bell Nexus has room for five people and a maximum weight capacity of 600 pounds, according to The Verge, which reports that Bell hopes to have the vehicle making flights in a few major cities by the mid-2020s.

While flying cars may present too many hazards to ever be fit for use, flying taxis could arrive in less than five years. Uber has said it intends to launch a flying taxi service by 2023, and one of the partners it has enlisted to design aircraft for the service, Bell Helicopter, unveiled a verticial-takeoff-and-landing air taxi vehicle, called the Bell Nexus, at this year's CES.

Read more: The best car we saw at CES 2019

The Bell Nexus features six "tilting ducted fans" powered by a hybrid-electric propulsion system. The vehicle has room for five people and a maximum weight capacity of 600 pounds, according to The Verge, which reports that Bell hopes to have the vehicle making flights in a few major cities by the mid-2020s.

ces 2019 graphic

The Bell Nexus was one of the most striking vehicles I saw at CES, and the prospect of flying taxis is more exciting than the possibilities offered by the scooters, autonomous shuttles, and personal aircraft on display at the event.

What it is: Bell Nexus vertical-takeoff-and-landing vehicle

Who makes it: Bell Helicopter

Why it's the best: Scooters and autonomous shuttles will have more immediate impacts on the future of transportation, but flying taxis are more exciting.

Where and when you can get it: Bell hopes to have the vehicle flying in major cities by the middle of the next decade, according to The Verge.

How much it will cost: Bell has not indicated how much rides in the vehicle might cost, but Uber has said it plans to make flying taxi rides affordable for "normal people."

 

SEE ALSO: 17 of the wackiest photos from the biggest tech convention of the year

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: These bespoke metal cars take 2,000 hours to make by hand — see the step-by-step process

The best auto accessory we saw at CES 2019

$
0
0

CarWink

  • CarWink, made by Innovart, allows drivers to communicate with vehicles behind them using text and animations.
  • Drivers hang the circular, digital display on their rear windshield and use voice prompts to display one of its pre-set animations or messages.
  • Some of the pre-set messages and animations don't seem useful, but others, like the ability to tell a car behind yours to turn off its high beams, could solve common problems for drivers.

Communicating with a car behind yours is difficult, particularly when the point you want to make can't be conveyed with a simple hand gesture. CarWink, made by Innovart, allows drivers to communicate with vehicles behind them using text and animations.

Read more: The best robot we saw at CES 2019

Drivers hang the circular, digital display on their rear windshield and use voice prompts to display one of its pre-set animations or messages. For example, if the car behind yours honks while you're stopped at an intersection to let a pedestrian cross, saying, "Carwink, pedestrian crossing," will display an image of a figure crossing a road followed by text that says, "ped xing."ces 2019 graphic

Some of the pre-set messages and animations don't seem useful (if you say, "Carwink, party time," the device will display an image of what appears to be a dinosaur wearing a hat and waving a flag), but others, like the ability to tell a car behind yours to turn off its high beams, could solve common problems for drivers.

CarWink seems overly expensive ($199 for immediate delivery, $169 for a pre-order with an uncertain timeline) at the moment, but its technology could be useful to just about anyone who drives.

What it is: The CarWink digital communication device

Who makes it: Innovart

Why it's the best: It's simple, novel, and solves a common problem for drivers.

Where and when you can get it: Innovart's website

How much it will cost: $199 for immediate delivery, $169 for a pre-order with an uncertain timeline

 

SEE ALSO: The best smart home device we saw at CES 2019

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch YouTuber Master Milo transform a small Ford into the ultimate stunt machine

The future of artificial intelligence in retail

$
0
0

Hype around artificial intelligence has never been higher — and one industry where it has a chance to make a major impact on profits is retail.The Future of Retail 2018: Artificial Intelligence

Business Insider Intelligence projects that AI will boost profitability in retail and wholesale by nearly 60% by 2035, setting off a wave of excitement and investment among companies.

The areas where AI will have its biggest impact are personalization, search and chatbots.

But as hype and misunderstanding continue to build, it’s become harder than ever to keep sight of the true disruptive potential of AI.

Find out how AI is being implemented in these three areas and how each one can impact revenue in this new FREE slide deck from Business Insider Intelligence.

In this third and final installment of the three-part Future of Retail 2018 series, Business Insider Intelligence takes a hard look at the retail use cases where AI can make an impact, explores noteworthy examples of retailers implementing the technology, and weighs the benefits of investing in AI today.

As an added bonus, you will gain immediate access to our exclusive Business Insider Intelligence Daily newsletter.

To get your copy of the third part of this FREE slide deck, simply click here.

Join the conversation about this story »

The best lifestyle tech we saw at CES 2019

$
0
0

savvy electric mirror ces 2019

  • Business Insider scoured the 2019 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to find the very best cutting-edge tech.
  • The best lifestyle tech we saw at CES 2019 had to be Electric Mirror's Savvy Smart Mirror, a gorgeous mirror that can also display information, run apps, play music and videos, and much more. 
  • While it's targeted towards hotels, the Savvy Smart Mirror has great potential to enhance any kind of lifestyle.

LAS VEGAS - Mirrors are perhaps the most underrated part of any home. We use them all the time, primarily as feedback mechanisms: to know if we've done a good job brushing our teeth, or brushing our hair, or picking our outfit for the day.

ces 2019 graphicThat's why Electric Mirror had the best lifestyle tech we saw at CES 2019, with its Savvy Smart Mirror — a device that improves upon one of the most useful items we keep in our homes.

The Savvy Smart Mirror has the mirror aspect down, but it just looks futuristic. Being able to see important information like the weather, or the news — stuff you might want to see before leaving in the morning, or sleeping at night — is not only useful, it's pretty cool.

Since it runs on Android (albeit an older version: 7.1 "Nougat"), the Smart Mirror can also run full apps, like Pandora for music. It's a mirror, but it's also a massive touchscreen. And down the line, we could see it getting even better with more smart-home controls and mirror-specific applications, to take advantage of the unique form factor.

The Savvy Smart Mirror is available in 10-inch and 22-inch sizes — on the showroom floor at CES, we saw two 22-inch panels working next to each other, which we could imagine in a large home or even a hotel. Given how much we all rely on mirrors, we could see an interactive mirror having great potential for an improved lifestyle.

What it is: An interactive mirror that shows you information.

Who makes it: Electric Mirror, Inc., based in Everett, Washington.

Why it's the best: Mirrors are essential to any lifestyle. They tell us how we look, and how we present ourselves, but the Savvy Smart Mirror can tell you even more than that — it can tell you the weather, or the news, or tell you about interesting attractions nearby, or let you control the lights in your room. It's equally appealing to businesses and consumers, and it could have a big impact on not only lifestyle, but happiness. 

Where and when you can get it: It's currently available through Electric Mirror's website.

How much it will cost: Electric Mirror will give you a quote based on your specific needs and setup.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The safest way to walk on ice is to impersonate a penguin — here's why

10 things in tech you need to know today

$
0
0

Facebook employees Mark Zuckerberg

Good morning! This is the tech news you need to know this Wednesday.

  1. Former Facebook employees reportedly say the corporate culture is like a cult where you have to be happy all the time. More than a dozen former Facebook staffers spoke to CNBC, and put much of the blame on Facebook's biannual peer-review system, where employees are "stack-ranked" and assigned a grade by management.
  2. A Motherboard investigation found US phone companies sell customers' data in real time, allowing bad actors to potentially track their location to within a few hundred metres. The investigation found data sold to firms like credit checkers can end up on the black market.
  3. Mark Zuckerberg's New Year's resolution is to host public debates about the effects of tech on society. Every year Zuckerberg poses himself a challenge, and this year he pledged to talk with "leaders, experts, and people in our community from different fields," every few weeks.
  4. Tim Cook appeared on "Mad Money" and repeated one of Steve Jobs' favorite sayings to defend Apple during its slump. Twice Cook repeated the phrase "it just works"— one of late Apple CEO Steve Jobs' mantras.
  5. Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi says there's a chance the company may not IPO in 2019 after all. Khosrowshahi told The Wall Street Journal in an interview published Tuesday that he and investors would be "disappointed" if there was no IPO but that "the company would be just fine."
  6. Google made a heap of announcements about its AI-powered "Google Assistant" at CES. Among other things it showed off "Interpreter mode," letting people talk to each other in different language while the virtual assistant translates.
  7. Google is moving in to a former Los Angeles shopping mall to open a massive new 584,000-square-foot office. Dubbed "One Westside," the offices will take up part of what is today the Westside Pavilion mall.
  8. "Fortnite" made nearly half a billion dollars on just Apple devices in 2018, according to a new report. In December 2018 alone, the game reportedly made just under $70 million on Apple devices.
  9. A gamer tried to go pro by pretending to be a woman in a scandal that exposed an ugly truth about esports."Overwatch" is one of the most successful esports titles in the world, with the Overwatch League and other events supporting more than 200 professional players.
  10. Facebook cleared political ads for a British far-right group it banned just 8 months ago. Facebook allowed political ads for far-right British political group Britain First to run on its platform in December, which ran for several days in late December.

Have an Amazon Alexa device? Now you can hear 10 Things in Tech each morning. Just search for "Business Insider" in your Alexa's flash briefing settings.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Japanese lifestyle guru Marie Kondo explains how to organize your home once and never again

Viewing all 66342 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images