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51% use social media for news each week and the growth has been enormous since 2013

Do you still read latest news on dead paper? Do you still watch TV for your latest news? If so, I can tell you who you are and how old you are. A new report from Reuters institute for the study of Journalism at the Universe of Oxford, claims that there is a generation divide when it comes to news consumption.

The research is based on a survey of more than 50,000 online news users in 26 countries around the world and it is the largest ongoing study of its kind. Author Nic Newman said “We really hit a landmark this year”, and for the first time, more than half of the DNR sample now uses social media for news each week, and the growth has been enormous since 2013.

51% use social media for news each week
12% say social media is their main news source
More 18-24`s now prefer social media (28%), as a news source, to TV news (24%)
44% of the DNR sample uses Facebook for news each week

No one is near the social media king Facebook with 44%. Next is YouTube (19%), although the video network plays a prominent news role in some countries. The report also claims that video news is growing more slowly than expected. Twitter is third with “only” 10%.

Press release graph 1 (1)

The report explores news consumption in : the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Belgium, Netherlands, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland, Greece, Turkey, South Korea, Japan, Australia, Canada and Brazil.

Director of Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ), Dr David A L. Levy, said in the foreword that the report is the fifth annual report that explores the changing environment around news across countries and you can read more about it at http://www.digitalnewsreport.org

Digital-born companies like BuzzFeed and The Huffinton Post are growing and The Huffington Post is the second most-consumed online news source in the U.S and the third popular in the U.K.

But do people trust the news? In the Unites States, news media is trusted by a third (33%) of users, but its worse in Greece with its lowest at 20%. Finland are at the top with 65%. It remains to see good quality Journalism and people’s willingness to pay for it.

 

asphalt

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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Flying Cars – What appears in the next 5 to 10 years will be incredible

Many lone-wolf investors have tried to make their flying-car dreams come true, but so far they have all ended up very disappointed. Not only with the cars but also with an empty bank account. Now, everything seems to have changed.

Flying cars have been a dream for a long time, but when will it be a reality? Google`s Co-founder Larry Page can make the dream come true. He had funded the new company that is working with those new flying cars which is Zee.Aero.

Zee-Aero is not a part of Google or its holding company called Alphabet Inc. Zee-Aero is funded by Larry Page since the company’s launch in 2010. Zee-Aero started right next to Google`s headquarters in Mountain View in California.

flyingcars

Zee-Aero started to work on a small, all-electric plan which in now a flying car. Larry Page have many similarities to Elon Mush and Jeff Bezos. They are all spending their own money to make a better and safer world based on their own childhood dreams.

So far, Larry Page has spent more than $100 million on Zee-Aero, and the company has its airport hangar in Hollister where a pair of prototype aircraft takes regular test flights, according to Bloomberg. Zee-Aero also has a manufacturing facility on NASA`s Ames Research Center campus at the edge of Mountain View.

It`s more easy to build flying cars now than it was a decade ago. The technology is better, materials are better, and autonomous navigation systems are better. All this together can make the flying car dream come true within a few years from now.

Zee-Aero was led by Kroo, the Stanford aerospace professor. He wrote the original Zee-Aero patent, No 9,242,738, which shows a strange-looking one-seater aircraft. Now, the employees are experts in motor and battery hardware.

The company has hired some of the brightest young aerospace designers and they all come from places like NASA, SpaceX and Boing. But they are not alone. A handful of similar companies work on different types of flying cars.

In May E-volo from Germany conducted manned flights of its Volocopter, which is a two-seat aircraft powered by 18 propellers. Other companies in the same business with a different model are AeroMobil, Aviation, Lilium, Airbus and Terrafugia.

One of the co-founders of Pinterest, Paul Sciarra said that electric motors and batteries appeared to have applications well beyond the auto industry. He said:

«The goal is to build a product that impacts the lives of lots of people. Not just folks that are amateur pilots or wealthy, but everyone.»

An aeronautical engineer who`s spent his career designing advanced aircraft at NASA, Mark Moore, said that «over the past five years, there have been these tremendous advances in the underlying technology.»

«What appears in the next 5 to 10 years will be incredible.»

 

asphalt

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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Big moments in the European Union 2016

Today is the last day of May, and June is approaching. A lot of things will happen in the European Union. One of the big moments is 23 June, which is the vote in Great Britain. Another thing is Tour de France later on this summer, but before that; Football.

June starts tomorrow and the summer holiday is near. So are The 2016 UEFA Europeann Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Euro 2016 or simply Euro 2016. This is the 15th edition of the UEFA European Championship.

The quadrennial international mens football championship of Europe is organized by UEFA, and UEFA Euro 2016 is scheduled to be held in France from 10 June to 10 July 2016, and will feature the continents top 24 national teams.

 

 

Spain have won the last two Euros, and the big question is: can they make a hat-trick?

Spain won in 2008 when Austria and Switzerland cohosted and four years later when Poland and Ukraine shared the event. France was chosen as the host nation on 28 May 2010, after a bidding process in which they beat Italy and Turkey for the right to host the 2016 finals.

The matches will be played in ten stadia in ten cities: Bordeaux, Lens, Lille, Lyon, Marseille, Nice, Paris, Saint-Denis, Sain-Ètienne, and Toulouse, and this is the third time that France hosts the tournament, after the inaugural tournament in 1960 and the 1984 finals.

Previous appearances in tournament: Germany 11, England 8, and the host France 8. Albania, Wales, Iceland, Northern Ireland and Slovakia are all having their debut, so nobody is near the World Champion Germany. A great football nation.

The draw for the finals took place at the Palais des Congrès de la Porte Maillot in Paris on 12 December 2015. The 24 qualified teams were drawn into six groups of four teams, and the French superstar and deejay David Guetta have made the UEFA Euro 2016 official song together with the Swedish pop star Zara Larsson.

The French team have won the European Championship twice: In 1984 and 2000.

The winning team earns the right to compete at the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup hosted by Russia.

 

asphalt

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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The Revolution of 1848 and Europe like it is today

Euro zone have always been a danger zone, and if you look at Europe right now, it is very similar to what happened in the Revolution of 1848, also know as the Spring of Nations, People`s Spring, Springtime of the Peoples, or the Year of Revolution.

It was a series of political upheavals throughout Europe in 1848. It remains the most widespread revolutionary wave in European history. The revolution was essentially democratic in nature, with the aim of removing the old feudal structure and creating independent national states.

The revolutionary wave began in France in February, and immediately spread to most of Europe and parts of Latin America.

 

revolution48

 

Over 50 countries were affected, but with no coordination or cooperation between their respective revolutionaries. Six factors were involved:

  1. widespread dissatisfaction with political leadership
  2. demands for more participation in government and democracy
  3. demands for freedom of press
  4. the demands of the working classes
  5. the upsurge of nationalism, and finally
  6. the regrouping of the reactionary forces based on the royalty, the aristocracy, the army, the church and the peasants.

The revolutions were most important in France, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Italy, and the Austrian Empire. As with several instances of revolution in Europe previously that of 1948 was to have its major point of origin in France.

The revolution arose from such a wide variety of causes that it is difficult to view them as resulting from a coherent movement or set of social phenomena.

Technological change was revolutionizing the life of the working classes.

A popular press extended political awareness, and new values and ideas such as popular liberalism, nationalism and socialism began to emerge. Some historians emphasize the serious crop failures, particularly those of 1846, that produced hardship among peasants and the working urban poor.

Poor grain harvests, the appearance of blight. An extremely serious disease. In potato crops, and generally depressed economic conditions across much of Europe in 1845 – 1846 led to sharply rising food prices, unemployment, and a radicalization of political attitudes.

Dramatic increases in the prices of food and fuel contributed to a situation where there were serious outbreaks of hunger-related Typhus fever, causing many fatalities. Trade was disrupted as there was less general spending as food came first where the poorest classes of people struggled to keep themselves fed and everyone found the necessities of life to be much more expensive.

The levels of unemployment rose significantly. Such general economic dislocation brought with it increases in crime as persons broke the laws in their efforts to get food, fuel or cash.

 

revolution1848

 

Those suffering from various forms of economic deprivation lost confidence in the authorities ability to help them and became somewhat resentful of occupational groups who could be seen as profit in from the crisis. In many cases the authorities found it very difficult to receive customary tax revenues as the population had a significantly reduced ability to pay.

During this times France was yet a monarchy under Louis Phillipe but with his «Liberal» monarchy having few real supporters. Elections were held on the basis of quite limited suffrage. Only some 170,000 wealthy men, (approximately one person in two hundred of an overall French population of 35 millions), could legally vote.

Many French people felt excluded from any possibility of gaining wealth, many also felt that the bourgeois «Liberal» monarchy of Louis Phillipe compared unfavourably with earlier «Glorious» eras of French Monarchy or Empire.

Louis Phillipe dismissed his unpopular Prime Minister Guizot on the 23rd and himself abdicated on the 24th. In the wake of these dramatic developments there was an establishment of a Provisional Government of a French Republic.

On the 25th February a group of socialists, armed and carrying red flags, gathered in front of the Hotel de Ville (or City Hall) in Paris where their insistence secured a decree which proclaimed that the newly formed provisional government would undertake to provide work and would also recognise workers rights to combine.

«The Government of the French Republic binds itself to guarantee the livelihood of the workers by providing work…. it will guarantee work for all citizens. It recognises that workers may organise in order to enjoy the profits of their labour.»

The rising tide of cultural and linguistic nationalism which Europe had experienced since the later eighteenth century was marked.

The middle class began to agitate. Although Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels, working in Brussels, had written The Communist Manifesto (published in German and London on February 21, 1848) at the request of the Communist league (an organization consisting principally of German workers), once they began agitation in Germany following the march insurrection in Berlin, their demands were considerably reduced.

They issued their «Demands of the Communist Party in Germany» from Paris in March, the pamphlet only urged unification of Germany, universal suffrage, abolition of feudal duties, and similar middle-class goals.

The middle and working classes thus shared a desire for reform, and agreed on many of the specific aims. Their participation in the revolutions, however, differed. While much of the impetus came from the middle classes, much of the cannon fodder came from the lower. The revolts first erupted in the cities.

The population in French rural areas had risen rapidly, causing many peasants to seek a living in the cities. Many in the bourgeoisie feared and distanced themselves from the working poor. Many unskilled laborers toiled from 12 to 12 hours per day when they had work, living in squalid, disease-ridden slums.

Traditional artisans felt the pressure of industrialization, having lost their guilds. Revolutionaries such as Karl Marx built up a following.

 

marx

 

The situation in the German states was similar. Parts of Prussia were beginning to industrialize. During the decade of the 1840`s, mechanized production in the textile industry brought about inexpensive clothing that undercut the handmade products of German tailors.

Reforms ameliorated the most unpopular features of rural feudalism, but industrial workers remained dissatisfied with these and pressed for greater change.

Urban workers had no choice but to spend half of their income on food, which consisted mostly of bread and potatoes. As a result of harvest failures, food prices soared and the demand for manufactured goods decreased, causing an increase in unemployment.

During the revolution, to address the problem of unemployment, workshops were organized for men interested in construction work. Officials also set up workshops for women when they felt they were excluded. Artisans and unemployed workers destroyed industrial machines when they threatened to give employers more power over them.

Rural population growth had led to food shortages, land pressure, and migration, both within and for Europe, especially to North America. In the years 1845 and 1846, a potato blight caused a subsistence crisis in Northern Europe.

 

1848

 

The effects of the blight were most severely manifested in the Great irish Famine, but also caused famine-like conditions in the Scottish-Highlands and throughout continental Europe. Aristocratic wealth (and corresponding power) was synonymous with the ownership of farm lands and effective control over the peasants. Peasants grievances exploded during the revolutionary year of 1848.

Despite forceful and often violent efforts of established and reactionary powers to keep them down, disruptive ideas gained popularity: democracy, liberalism, nationalism, and socialism.

The first outbreak came in Sicily, starting in January 1848. There had been several previous revolts against Bourbon rule; this one produced an independent state that lasted only 16 months before the Bourbons came back.

The failed revolt was reveres a dozen years later as the Bourbon kingdom of the Two Sicilian collapsed in 1860 – 1861 with the Risorgimento.

The «February Revolution» in France was sparked by the suppression of the campagne des banquets. This revolution was driven by nationalist and republican ideals among the French general public, who believed the people should rule themselves.

It ended the constitutional monarchy of Louis-Phillippe, and led to the creation of the French Second Republic. This government was headed by Louis-Napoleon, who, after only four years, established the Second French Empire in 1852.

Alexis de Tocqueville remarked in his Recollection of the period, «society was cut in two: those who had nothing united in common envy, and those who had anything united in common terror.»

The «March Revolution» in the German states took place in the south and the west of Germany, with large popular assemblies and mass demonstrations. Led by well-educated students and intellectuals, they demanded German national unity, freedom of the press, and freedom of assembly.

The uprising was not well-coordinated, but had in common a rejection of traditional, autocratic political structure in the 39 independent states of the German Confederation. The middle-class and working-class components of the Revolution split, and in the end, the conservative aristocracy defeated it, forcing many liberals into exile.

Great Britain, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, the Russian Empire (including Poland and Finland), and the Ottoman Empire were the only major European states to go without a national revolution over this period.

Sweden and Norway were little affected. Serbia, though formerly unaffected by the revolt as it was a part of the Ottoman state, actively supported the Serbian revolution in the Habsburg Empire.

Russia`s relative stability was attributed to the revolutionary groups’ inability to communicate with each other.

Switzerland and Portugal were also unaffected in 1848, though both had gone through civil wars in the preceding years (the Sonderbund War in Switzerland and the Liberal Wars in Portugal). The introduction of the Swiss Federal Constitution in 1848 was a revolution of sorts, laying the foundation of Swiss society as it is today.

General Cavaignac was invited by the assembly to continue with the exercise of sweeping powers until a new constitution was in place. In their efforts to secure social peace in Paris the authorities arranged, by law of 19 September, for the emigration of several thousand workers, with their families, to colonial north Africa as agricultural settlers.

A budget of 50 million francs, an enormous sum for those days, spread over several years, was put in place to fund the programme.

Several «french» adminstrative Departments were established in colonial North Africa with an expectation that their politically enfranchised, (i.e. Mainly french colonial), inhabitants would receive rights of representation in the National Assembly.

Europe today is far away from the Revolution of 1848, but many young people feel the same as people did about 150 years ago. They feel that the system is hopelessly anachronistic. They feel in crushes creativity, and they feel that they are being undone by new technologies and lifestyles.

Just like 1848, there is optimism, but at the same time it is also fear of religious, ethnic or nationalist forces unleashed. Everything is going in cycle, and the time we`re living in now is similar to the year of 1848.

skjold5

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

 

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Tesla plans to sell 400 000 Model 3 for under $35,000 each

Tesla is a great vehicle, but the stock is not among my top ten favorite stocks. It`s expensive to build vehicles in a very competitive industry which means they are burning a lot of money with a high cost.

Tesla will report results on Wednesday, May 4, 2016, after the bell.

tesla

Tesla plans to sell Model 3 to the mass-market in 2017, and the price is set to $35,000 and have already 400,000 preorders. That sounds good, but investors are concerned about their ability to deliver.

The company guided for about 80,000 – 90,000 deliveries of their Model X and Model S last year, but we all know that this was too optimistic. In 2016, they delivered a record 50,000 vehicles but failed to meet volume expectations the company set earlier in the year.

Tesla is still aiming to scale production up to 500,000 vehicles per year by 2020, and is now on the hook to deliver 400k of one model, with production starting next year. Model 3 will come with lower margins.

Model 3 comes on top of Model X and Model S, and a third model will keep Tesla`s profits in the red for the foreseeable future. Operating expenses currently accounts for almost 50% of their revenue.

Large amounts of money is already spent in launching their first SUV and building out a sustainable battery. As production ramps up for each of these models, energy credits from green technology are expected to shrink proportionally to sales growth.

Estimize call for EPS of $-0,51, which is 1 cent higher than Wall Street, while revenue estimates of $1,60B are just slightly above the sell-sides $1,59B. The crowd has been bearish on Teslas profitability, moving EPS estimates down -326% since the Q4 report, now expecting earnings to decline 10% on a YoY basis.

Revenue estimates have also been ratcheted down by 8% but are expected to grow 47% from the year-ago period.

Investors are waiting for a forward-looking guidance on Wednesday. Not only Q1 results.

 

skjold5

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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