Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Realme 11 Pro+ appears in leaked live photo

Realme will introduce the 11 Pro and 11 Pro+ on May 10. We have seen multiple images and teasers already, revealing the camera design and the front panel. However, now we get to see the smartphone in a couple of real-life photos, shared by Evan Blass. Given the rudimentary setup and poor image quality, the smartphone was likely spotted in a regulatory filing. Nevertheless, we can see the curved sides of the display, the punch hole for the selfie shooter and the golden ring on the oreo-shaped camera island. The phone is expected to have a 200MP main camera with OIS, which sits behind...



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Monday, May 1, 2023

Your site needs more than just one user onboarding experience

Many data-driven startups have uncovered that having one single user onboarding experience can ultimately make or break them. This is what I call the single onboarding misconception.

Take Twitter as a prime example of a company that has spent countless resources to perfect their onboarding flow so that it’s unique for every user.

Upon signing up, the site asks the new user to select people they are interested in following. Immediately, they can have a rich feed that’s custom tailored to their liking. This is no different for any other B2C or B2B startup.

If you’re just starting up, it shouldn’t be a top priority to customize onboarding experiences, but there are multiple low-lift items that can be initially implemented. I’ll describe how to think about the type of data needed to make onboarding unique and share some examples of how I’ve implemented this myself.

It all starts during acquisition

Experience has convinced me that without a multipath onboarding experience, startups cannot reach their full potential. Recently, I encountered various fintech cryptocurrency exchanges that ask for a customer’s “Experience Level” with cryptocurrency. What I haven’t seen as prominently is a personalized experience based on the answer to this question.

Initial data collected during acquisition through a lead form or during sign-up for a product will help fuel a multi-onboarding experience. During my time with the growth team at Coinbase, many of our lifecycle email and push campaigns were designed to be triggered based on the user’s behavior. While this wasn’t a fully personalized experience, we made sure to tailor our communications based on the in-app behaviors of the users.

If a user was a power trader (if they had a high volume of trades, for example), we would send emails on ETH staking, liquidity pools and more advanced cryptocurrency investment actions.

When thinking about the type of data necessary to bucket users into a specific journey, ask yourself this essential question:

What are my consumer personas?

Based on the response you receive to this question, you’ll be able to determine which questions are needed to help you segment users during their onboardings. Some of the foundational variables to include early on are:

  • Personal attributes
  • Past experiences
  • Use cases
  • Goals

Each startup should have its own unique flavor of questions to ask, but if you’re stuck, select from the list of examples provided above as a start. These will ultimately shed light on the question of which customer persona you’re acquiring.

Your site needs more than just one user onboarding experience by Walter Thompson originally published on TechCrunch



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Google could bring a separate volume control for calls and notifications

The Android OS is known for having many features, some more obscure than others but one has been missing since the first version was launched nearly 15 years ago - a separate volume slider for calls and notifications. According to 9to5Google, this will finally happen, as Google implemented an ADB command back in December. The line in question is adb shell device_config put systemui volume_separate_notification trueand it is about time for the feature to be released, either with QPR3 or Android 14 in the coming months. The new slider The “Ring & Notification volume” slider...



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The next Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra update to boost low-light imaging

It seems like Samsung is committed to eke out the best from Galaxy S23 Ultra's camera and improve the overall experience as much as possible. The company already pushed a major camera update and rumors suggest there are more on the way. Not long ago, Ice Universe said that Samsung is working on a fix for the HDR halo effect and today the same tipster claims to have seen a beta update that improves low-light performance. It's probably safe to assume that both enhancements will come with one OTA update. The latest report doesn't go into details about what Samsung has done to improve...



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Regulators close First Republic Bank, JPMorgan named as the buyer of $330B assets and deposits, FDIC on the hook for $13B

First Republic Bank (FRB), on the brink of collapse in the weeks after the Silicon Valley Bank crisis, has finally fallen over, but with a relatively quick resolution into its next chapter: today the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) announced that it was being closed by the the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, that the FDIC was appointed as receiver, and that the FDIC would be selling the assets to JPMorgan.

Its assets and deposits total just over $330 billion combined.

Specifically, “to protect depositors, the FDIC is entering into a purchase and assumption agreement with JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Columbus, Ohio, to assume all of the deposits and substantially all of the assets of First Republic Bank,” it said.

The FDIC also confirmed deposits will continue to be insured by the FDIC at an estimated cost of about $13 billion to its insurance fund. The deal will cover assets of $229.1 billion and $103.9 billion in total deposits. JPMorgan is purchasing all assets and deposits, along with 84 offices in eight states, with all depositors of FRB now customers of JPMorgan Chase.

The news comes after several days of speculation that the FRB would collapse, sending the stock into a death spiral. JPMorgan, along with PNC, were among the banks who submitted bids over the weekend. The FDIC called the process “highly competitive.”

Banking partner

Like Silicon Valley Bank, First Republic has been a major banking partner to the world of technology as it grew into a huge, and very valuable, industry. That meant it would almost certainly fall into the blast radius of SVB as it collapsed.

To avoid a contagion effect, First Republic was quick to move on messaging about its own state of stability in the wake of SVB’s failure. So just as SVB started selling its assets — at the same time, in fact, that SVB announced a sale of its U.K. business to HSBC — First Republic was bolstering its position with massive funding injections to bring its reserves to $70 billion. One of the those big funders was the FDIC. The other? JPMorgan.

Still, it looks like this was not enough. Faltering confidence in companies that were too dependent on the same sector as SVB sent people running from First Republic both as customers and investors.

The FDIC has had to face up to its own drama and criticism — some blame SVB’s collapse on U.S. regulators not acting quickly or decisively enough before it was too late — and so this was a relatively quick move on its part. While the estimated cost to its Deposit Insurance Fund is about $13 billion, the final figure will be determined when it ceases to be in receivership.

Alongside this deal, the FDIC, JPMorgan Chase Bank, and National Association, “are also entering into a loss-share transaction on single family, residential and commercial loans it purchased of the former First Republic Bank,” it added. The FDIC is the receiver, while JPMorgan Chase Bank and National Association “will share in the losses and potential recoveries on the loans covered by the loss–share agreement.” It’s not clear what the value is of that aspect of the deal.

Regulators close First Republic Bank, JPMorgan named as the buyer of $330B assets and deposits, FDIC on the hook for $13B by Ingrid Lunden originally published on TechCrunch



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AI platform to analyze creative advertising raises $5.1M from investors, including a16z

In this increasingly AI-driven era, creative and media teams will probably need to employ the technology to up their game on analyzing their creative assets and A/B testing — or someone else will simply beat them to the punch.

Alison is a startup out of Israel that analyzes creative work, such as typeface characters, colors, sounds, and text. It then gives the creative team a data-driven creative brief prompt that they can use to feed either into a generative AI production platform like Midjourney or (even!) their human creative team.

The company has now raised a $5.1M, pre-seed round from investors including a16z, Crescendo Venture Partners, and yellowHEAD, among others.

While its main competitors include VidMob, Replai, and Vizit, Alison AI says it can allow advertisers to “see which creative elements had the biggest impact on their competitor’s creatives,” for instance, says Asaf Yanai, co-founder and CEO.

It does this by analyzing advertising creative elements using 10+ AI models, including text recognition, sound recognition, visual recognition, sentiment recognition, etc. to identify elements of the creative.

Yanai claims AlisonAI currently analyzes 1 billion creative elements across all social platforms.

Alison is currently supporting YouTube, AdWords, AdMob, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok, among other platforms.

AI platform to analyze creative advertising raises $5.1M from investors, including a16z by Mike Butcher originally published on TechCrunch



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vivo to launch iQOO Neo 8 Pro with 120W fast charging

The iQOO Neo 8 series is expected this month, and reports are the Pro member of the family will be among the first devices with Mediatek’s new Dimensity 9200+ chipset. The phone with model number V2302A was certified on 3C/CCC, revealing the iQOO brand is once again putting 120W fast charging on its mightiest Neo phone. The standard is nothing new - it has been part of vivo’s portfolio ever since the iQOO 5 Pro, launched almost three years ago. It pumps power at 20V/6A rates and is the same as the predecessor, the iQOO Neo 7 in all its variants. Vivo also certified the S17e with 80W...



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