“This outcome could also prompt other businesses to think twice before setting up shop or expanding in the region,” he added. “The alternative sites which were part of the earlier announcement, Northern Virginia and Nashville, could well benefit with even more jobs than planned.”
“To me, having a set of brands and set of products?for that demographic and especially?kids and college students?— it’s super?important to us,” he said, adding that “I?don’t want to sort of devalue a lot of other things that we do for different audiences only to the exclusion of this.”
“We are kind of like an energy Fitbit for your home,” said Enerphant CTO Tony Chotibhongs. “So basically, its like a Fitbit, you wear it and it senses your temperature, your movement, and it recommends to you what to do to keep you?healthy. So, our solution is going to be an energy Fitbit. You put a sensor inside your home, it collects data, and it recommends to you what to do to save energy… We have access to electricity usage, temperature, humidity, motion, fans, everything inside your home. So we collect all this data, and it goes to our database and then we try to learn from your behavior and help you save energy.”
“To me, this has strong potential for being the future model of compute,” said Michael Behrendt, a Distinguished Engineer at IBM, “because you really don’t have to pre-buy or pre-allocate; with serverless that goes away. We’re used to that already in other domains, like with APIs: you pay by the API call. Serverless is applying that notion to compute in general.”
“We’re the biggest [software as a service]?vendor today,” he said.
“We’ve seen Seattle change and we’ve seen a lot of people not prepared for what happens when Amazon moves into their city,” Copley said.
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“Traffic has become intolerable over the past year in the Mercer corridor and lower Queen Anne,” wrote GeekWire reader Scott Moore in response to the news of more Amazon.com buildings. “While the Mercer construction is partly to blame, it seems likely Amazon’s continued expansion will out-strip any benefits that improvement will provide.?It’s all well and good to see development and new jobs coming to Seattle, but without a comprehensive approach to transportation we’re going to be looking at more gridlock.”
“They’re doing ok,” Diller said.
“Victoria?brings a fantastic blend of entrepreneurial and executive experience that has resulted in a proven track record of leading effective change across a variety of industries,” said Michael Dix, CEO of Intentional Futures. “Victoria’s skills and experience as a creative innovator integrate well with our team and will bolster our education, social impact, and strategy practices for our clients.”
“We also have made the difficult decision to right-size the company to align?our resources with our future direction. This action requires us to scale?back our employment in various areas that are not aligned with our platform?strategy.”—Intelius founder Naveen Jain discussing the company’s recent layoffs in a memo to staff of the Bellevue Internet company.