Tuesday, May 31, 2011
RICK ROSS ON STALLEY AND TEEDRA MOSES
Tags: Sucker Free
Monday, May 30, 2011
Saturday, May 28, 2011
DJ BIG STEEVE AND TPAIN I AM YM MIXTAPE
DJ DRAMA AND YOUNG JEEZY PRESENTS: THE REAL IS BACK
Friday, May 27, 2011
Thursday, May 26, 2011
MAYBACH MUSIC GROUP ON MTV RAPFIX
Tags: MTV Shows
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
ADIDAS MICROPACER GORE TEX
adidas Micropacer Gore-Tex Spring 2011
01 February 2011, 12.50 | Posted in Sneakers | 3 comments »
adidas will soon release their classic Micropacer running shoe in a Gore-Tex version. The metallic upper is replaced with Gore-Tex on the sneaker and all seems are taped, matching the taped 3 Stripes branding on the sneaker. End has them up for pre-order now.
Take a closer look at the adidas Micropacer Gore-Tex sneakers after the jump.
http://www.highsnobiety.com/news/2011/02/01/adidas-micropacer-gore-tex-spring-2011/
PAC DIV- FALLIN
Pac Div, "Fallin'" from Clement & Co. on Vimeo.
Monday, May 23, 2011
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Saturday, May 21, 2011
Friday, May 20, 2011
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Microsoft's Bill Gates says he advocated Skype takeover
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-13434352Microsoft's Bill Gates says he advocated Skype takeover
Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates Bill Gates says Microsoft's decision to buy Skype will provide better video conferencing opportunities
Continue reading the main story
Related Stories
Microsoft buys phone firm Skype
Microsoft's founder, Bill Gates, has said he advocated the company's takeover of Skype, and urged other board members to support the move.
Last week Microsoft agreed to pay $8.5bn (£5.2bn) for the loss-making internet phone service.
"I was a strong proponent at the board level for the deal being done," Mr Gates, Microsoft's chairman told the BBC's Hardtalk programme.
The multi-billion dollar deal is Microsoft's largest ever acquisition.
"I think it's a great, great deal for Skype. I think it's a great deal for Microsoft," he added.
Skype enables its users to contact each other over the internet for free, while charging for calls made to both traditional landline phones and mobiles.
The Luxembourg-based company, which has 663 million users worldwide has however struggled to make a profit.
But in the interview with the BBC's Stephen Sackur, Mr Gates said the decision to buy Skype was strategic.
"The idea of video conferencing is going to get so much better than it is today. Skype actually does get a fair bit of revenue," said Mr Gates.
"It'll be fascinating to see how the brilliant ideas out of Microsoft research, coming together with Skype, what they can make of that."
Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates Bill Gates says Microsoft's decision to buy Skype will provide better video conferencing opportunities
Continue reading the main story
Related Stories
Microsoft buys phone firm Skype
Microsoft's founder, Bill Gates, has said he advocated the company's takeover of Skype, and urged other board members to support the move.
Last week Microsoft agreed to pay $8.5bn (£5.2bn) for the loss-making internet phone service.
"I was a strong proponent at the board level for the deal being done," Mr Gates, Microsoft's chairman told the BBC's Hardtalk programme.
The multi-billion dollar deal is Microsoft's largest ever acquisition.
"I think it's a great, great deal for Skype. I think it's a great deal for Microsoft," he added.
Skype enables its users to contact each other over the internet for free, while charging for calls made to both traditional landline phones and mobiles.
The Luxembourg-based company, which has 663 million users worldwide has however struggled to make a profit.
But in the interview with the BBC's Stephen Sackur, Mr Gates said the decision to buy Skype was strategic.
"The idea of video conferencing is going to get so much better than it is today. Skype actually does get a fair bit of revenue," said Mr Gates.
"It'll be fascinating to see how the brilliant ideas out of Microsoft research, coming together with Skype, what they can make of that."
Flickr: iPad 2 Camera Has Only 23 Active Daily Users
http://mashable.com/2011/05/14/ipad-camera-2/According to Flickr’s camera usage statistics, the iPad 2′s camera is used by very few people — only 23 active daily users. And so far, 12,811 photos have been taken and uploaded to Flickr with the device.
By comparison, the iPhone 4 has 4,402 daily active users; more than a million photos have been taken with the device.
We don’t have exact numbers of iPad 2 sales, but the tablet has been on the market since March 11. According to Apple, strong sales have resulted in a record-setting quarter, with analysts estimating that about half a million devices sold in during the iPad 2′s first weekend on the market.
The iPad 2′s camera has been one of the most criticized aspects of the device: At 0.7 megapixels, it’s only good for the most basic tasks. Still, with millions of iPad 2s in customers’ hands, one would expect that more people would be using the device. But the significantly low number of daily active users on Flickr shows that is not the case.
iPad 2 owners: Do you use the device’s camera? When was the last time you uploaded a photo taken on the iPad to a site such as Flickr or Facebook? Please, share your opinions in the comments.
Image courtesy of Flickr
By comparison, the iPhone 4 has 4,402 daily active users; more than a million photos have been taken with the device.
We don’t have exact numbers of iPad 2 sales, but the tablet has been on the market since March 11. According to Apple, strong sales have resulted in a record-setting quarter, with analysts estimating that about half a million devices sold in during the iPad 2′s first weekend on the market.
The iPad 2′s camera has been one of the most criticized aspects of the device: At 0.7 megapixels, it’s only good for the most basic tasks. Still, with millions of iPad 2s in customers’ hands, one would expect that more people would be using the device. But the significantly low number of daily active users on Flickr shows that is not the case.
iPad 2 owners: Do you use the device’s camera? When was the last time you uploaded a photo taken on the iPad to a site such as Flickr or Facebook? Please, share your opinions in the comments.
6 Reasons Tablets Are Ready for the Classroom
Since the debut of the iPad, tablets have captured the imagination of consumers. In just one year, the iPad surpassed even the most optimistic of projections to define a brand new product category and become the best-selling gadget of all time, and Forrester analysts project that in 2011, tablet sales will more than double.
But are tablets ready for the classroom? Though tablets have caught on with consumers, the higher education market has been slower to adopt, and understandably so. From grades to degrees to job placement after graduation, the devices that are used in classrooms are tied to important outcomes.
As a result, colleges and universities must proceed carefully when considering whether to adopt a new technology on a large scale. However, reports from recent iPad pilot programs at schools across the country have been positive, and some colleges have even begun distributing tablets to all of their students. As we wrap up the first post-iPad school year, do we know enough to make the “fad, fail, magical” call? I think so.
By looking at all that tablets offer in the context of student behavior and some of the recent trends in education, it’s clear that tablets are ready for the classroom. Here’s a look at the top reasons why.
1. Tablets Are the Best Way to Show Textbooks
By allowing students to highlight text, take notes in the margin and access a dictionary directly within the book itself, tablets are matching (and in some cases, surpassing) everything that a traditional book — print or digital — can offer.
2. Classrooms Are Ready for Tablets
Though tablets are a recent phenomenon, many students in high school and college have been using smartphones for years, and are already well-acquainted with touchscreen technology. Because they’ve become so accustomed to using these devices, students are increasingly expecting to use them in the classroom setting. When classrooms don’t implement what has now become “everyday” technology, we’re doing students a disservice.
Additionally, students — and consumers in general — are becoming more comfortable using tablets for advanced tasks. According to a new Nielsen survey, 35% of tablet owners said they used their desktop computers less often or not at all now, and 32% of laptop users said the same. Most tellingly, more than 75% of tablet owners said they used their tablet for tasks they once used their desktop or laptop for. While tablets can’t totally match laptops in terms of functionally (yet), they can get today’s students most of the way there.
3. Tablets Fit Students’ Lifestyles
The appeal of tablets to a college student is obvious: They’re thin, lightweight, and spring to life without delay, making them much easier to take to (and use in) class than a laptop or netbook. Longer battery life means that students don’t have to worry about carrying a charger with them. Forgot what the professor said at the end of class about the mid-term? Launch Tegrity, tap the lecture and replay it in just seconds. That’s faster than texting a half-dozen classmates and waiting for what might be an inaccurate response.
4. Tablets Have the Software to Be Competitive
5. Tablets Integrate With Education IT Trends
Cloud-based solutions have become ever more popular with colleges and universities, which are looking to deliver synchronized experiences that are device agnostic. Tablets align well with this trend, given their portability and options for constant connectivity. With tablets and cloud-based systems, students can work anywhere on campus and make sure that their work is saved in a central location and accessible from all of their devices. They also don’t have to pay for computing power that they no longer need.
6. Tablets Are Becoming More Available
One of the primary reasons that tablets have been slow to penetrate the higher education market was their limited availability. Apple’s supply chain issues and the difficulty that some Android tablet manufacturers have faced in getting their products to market have made it difficult for schools to get serious about adopting. As these issues are resolved over the coming year, expect to see more and more tablets popping up on campuses.
Lower price points will make tablets even more appealing to colleges and universities. For close to a year, Apple went virtually unchallenged in the tablet market. Increased competition should drive down prices. The wave of tablets introduced at CES in January is just the tip of the iceberg. With dozens to hundreds of offerings, many based on Google’s open source Android OS, expect price points to fall quickly just as they have for laptops, smartphones and HDTV sets. Heck, Apple’s original iPad can be had for as little as $349 if you get the timing right and don’t mind a refurb.
How close are we today to tablets displacing computers on campuses? Closer than you might think. I wrote this article on a tablet with a touchscreen keyboard.http://mashable.com/2011/05/16/tablets-education/
DJ KHALED- THE KAING OF "IM ON ONE"
Making Of "I'm On One" from Dazed One on Vimeo.
Monday, May 16, 2011
New Video: @3RD_DEGREE_ "Lil Child"
3rd Degrees "Lil Child" video from his freshman mixtape, "Same Me, New Faces." Produced by McKay "Lil Child" is just one of the many hard hitting tracks you will find on 3rd's upcoming release dropping soon.
Check out his newest video "Lil Child" below
Adi Dazzle: Q&A With Herbert Hainer
NEW YORK — What a difference a few years can make.
Sitting in the Adidas showroom on the last day of March, CEO Herbert Hainer — who marked his 10th anniversary at the company’s helm last month — is relaxed and upbeat after a 12-day trip around the U.S.
Accompanied for much of the voyage by Reebok President Uli Becker and Adidas America President Patrik Nilsson, Hainer’s mission was to connect with retailers he doesn’t always visit — Kohl’s, say, or Academy Sports — and lay the groundwork for future projects.
“I saw a lot of the country this time,” Hainer said, listing off his stops in Houston, St. Louis, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, Nashville, Miami and finally New York.
“I am very happy coming off this tour with all the key players,” the CEO told Footwear News in an exclusive interview. “The timing couldn’t have been better. Business is good and the brands are growing.”
That upbeat spirit is a change from a few years ago, when the company found itself off price, without a compelling technical story and widely overdistributed in both the Adidas and Reebok brands.
But these days Adidas Group seems to be back on track. Despite an uncertain economic climate and the unprecedented manufacturing crunch, the Herzogenaurach, Germany-based athletic giant more than doubled its income in 2010, earning 567 million euros, or $806.4 million at current exchange. Annual revenue advanced 9 percent to hit 12 billion euros, or $17.1 billion. And in the challenging North American market, the group notched 14 percent sales growth for the Adidas brand and 22 percent for Reebok.
Hainer said there are issues ahead, particularly on the manufacturing side. Like almost every player in the space, the Adidas Group will raise prices on certain products for both brands in 2011 and 2012. “Price increases will come. We can’t do it without [them],” he said.
But even so, the company is pushing forward with an aggressive agenda.
In November, Hainer unveiled “Route 2015,” the firm’s five-year plan to boost sales to 17 billion euros by 2015, with growth in the U.S. market a critical element.
To support the expansion, on March 16 the group launched “All Adidas,” its biggest campaign to date and the first brand-focused effort since 2004. The global TV and Internet push is meant to help the brand re-establish its identity.
A rejuvenated Reebok is also getting its share of attention, particularly in the U.S. Its new natural-motion RealFlex line, which hits stores this month, is considered a big opportunity, Hainer said. And the brand’s long-moribund Classics line is being reanimated with help from hip-hop producer and artist Swizz Beatz, who signed a multiyear deal to serve as creative director of the segment.
Analyst Erwan Rambourg of London-based HSBC Bank said Reebok, in particular, has significant growth potential. “We’re quite bullish on Reebok,” Rambourg said. “We believe [the brand] has great opportunity to grow outside the U.S. this year and to grow outside footwear. There’s potential for good top-line growth, but also on margins.”
According to Ken Hicks, chairman, president and CEO of New York-based Foot Locker Inc., there’s momentum behind both Reebok and Adidas. “They’ve got a lot of things going on and they’re a tremendous partner,” he said. “When you look at new products, such as the Zig and Flex, and their move into basketball — the Dwight Howard and Derrick Rose Adidas shoes and the John Wall Zig [basketball shoe with Reebok] — it demonstrates their interest in developing this big part of the American athletic shoe business.”
Here, Hainer talks with FN about growing Reebok, keeping the supply chain in check and plotting Adidas’ path.
FN: “All Adidas” launched a few weeks ago. Why was now the right time to create a brand-building campaign?
HH: Our last [push] was in 2004 with “Impossible Is Nothing.” Since then, we’ve broken it up [and focused] on categories with football ads, basketball ads, etc. We said it’s time to bring it together again to show the consumer what Adidas is all about: It’s not just football and not just Originals. This is the biggest brand campaign that we have. We spent more money than we ever have before, and it seems to be working very well.
FN: The campaign is set through 2011. Will it carry through as the brand statement in 2012 and for the Olympics?
HH: It could be. We haven’t decided yet what we are doing in 2012. We’re already taking out parts of the campaign now for individual categories, so it might be that after we have done the grand campaign this year, we’ll break it up into categories again. We are the sponsor of the London Olympic Organizing Committee, so there is definitely big activity from us that you can expect in 2012.
FN: Basketball and running have taken center stage here in the U.S., both in ads and in your product initiatives. Are those the categories you’ll focus on going forward?
HH: At the end of the day, we have to have everything if we want to get to 17 billion euros in sales. But we have called out a few [categories] where we see the biggest growth potential: running, basketball and the fast-fashion vertical business model. And we have Reebok. In Reebok, we have so much more potential. We’ve just scratched the surface, and we have a lot of new ideas.
FN: Where are you with Reebok?
HH: We want to make it an international brand — as international as Adidas is — and we definitely can do it. We have infrastructure, we have subsidiaries all over the world, we have our offices and the people. But the stage that the brand is in is different from country to country, so for now, we need to harmonize it and internationalize it with one position and one clear message. We have said that in 2015 we definitely want to do 3 billion euro. In 2010, we had 1.9 billion. But my honest opinion is that that is conservative [as a target] because the potential has definitely begun. We will build a much bigger apparel business, not just in the three pillars — [EasyTone, Zig and the new RealFlex line] — but in general with the basic training gear, fitness gear, women’s and more. We’ll also be building Classics.
FN: The RealFlex lightweight, ultra-flexible running collection debuts globally this month. What are your expectations for it?
HH: This is a pillar that can become as big as EasyTone. The orders are extremely good, with broad-based distribution in the U.S. market. We really have high hopes for it.
FN: Toning has been particularly challenged in the U.S. What will you be doing to address the category going forward?
HH: We’re holding some products back. We are taking some of them and putting it into our factory outlets, and giving retailers newer products. We will further evolve EasyTone and come up with new innovations.
FN: You’ve spoken publicly about the opportunities for the brands in China, Russia and the U.S. Are there other areas you’re looking at as well?
HH: In the future, India can become a big market. I don’t know how fast it will grow, but the potential is definitely there. When you look just at the Cricket World Cup’s power, how excited people there are, [it’s clear that India] can be a big market.
FN: Is that a near-term or long-term opportunity?
HH: Long term, I think. I have to look long term and manage short term.
FN: On a broader scale, rising materials costs have been a huge pressure across the industry. What is your take?
HH: It’s definitely a challenge. When you see the input prices and, to a certain extent, labor costs, this is something we haven’t experienced at this magnitude. Cotton has doubled in the last 12 months, and polyester, rubber, oil, everything went up. And obviously, we want to protect our margin and our profit to give what we can to the shareholders. But [these increases] are not coming gradually. They’re coming harshly and in a short period of time, and we don’t have much experience [dealing with those conditions].
FN: How will the Adidas Group address the increases?
HH: We’re trying to mitigate it from different angles. On the one hand, we’ll try to improve and be more efficient and faster in and take the costs out in our supply chain. On the other hand, we’ll try to re-engineer some of the products without jeopardizing quality, functionality or innovation. And last, we will increase prices. The consumer has to take their fair share as well. Therefore, price increases will come.
FN: What do you mean, “re-engineer”?
HH: We have to look more intensely into many of our products and ask, what is the real benefit for the consumer, what is the real functionality? You don’t need to always add the whistles and bells to every product. We always try to make the best running shoe, the best basketball shoe, but sometimes when you give designers too much freedom, they make Ferraris when you only need a BMW.
FN: How have your customers reacted to prices going up?
HH: Obviously, no retail partner is jumping with excitement when you tell them we have to have price increases. But it’s quite simple. I say, “Do you want your margin to suffer? No. Should my margin suffer? No.” So we have to do it.
FN: How long do you predict this inflationary period will last?
HH: I’m not an expert in raw materials, so I have to ask our expert and they ask the other experts. On the oil side, you have this Libya war; on the cotton side, you have the flooding in Pakistan and in Thailand. What we hear is pricing in cotton may have peaked because more and more cotton fields are coming back. Oil, we have to see what’s going on in the Middle East. Rubber is absorbed by the car industry at the moment. I don’t think that rises will be that steep anymore, but I’m not here to say the worst is over because nobody can predict that.
FN: Have you taken any action on the factory side to increase efficiency?
HH: We have consolidated manufacturing heavily in the last 10 years, mainly on the footwear side. We don’t produce by ourselves, so we are working closely with our main suppliers, asking them, “How do you see the labor situation and government restrictions or import tariffs going forward?” and together with them we are building up our sourcing strategy.
FN: Are you looking into factories outside China?
HH: [Our partners] are investing in other countries, but still the majority [of the production] will stay in China. When you see our plans for 2015 — and Nike has announced their plans and they also want to grow — there is more capacity needed. And you can’t do it without China.
FN: Are you concerned that price increases and the general economic situation could dampen consumer spending?
HH: Yeah, but when you look at 2010, the [economic] situation was the same and people bought our shoes. Otherwise, we wouldn’t have grown by 1.6 billion [euros in sales]. If you give the consumer a reason to buy, then they are still spending. So that is always what we are trying to do: bring new, innovative products to the market.http://www.wwd.com/footwear-news?module=tn#/article/footwear-news/adi-dazzle-qa-with-herbert-hainer-3578652
Sitting in the Adidas showroom on the last day of March, CEO Herbert Hainer — who marked his 10th anniversary at the company’s helm last month — is relaxed and upbeat after a 12-day trip around the U.S.
Accompanied for much of the voyage by Reebok President Uli Becker and Adidas America President Patrik Nilsson, Hainer’s mission was to connect with retailers he doesn’t always visit — Kohl’s, say, or Academy Sports — and lay the groundwork for future projects.
“I saw a lot of the country this time,” Hainer said, listing off his stops in Houston, St. Louis, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, Nashville, Miami and finally New York.
“I am very happy coming off this tour with all the key players,” the CEO told Footwear News in an exclusive interview. “The timing couldn’t have been better. Business is good and the brands are growing.”
That upbeat spirit is a change from a few years ago, when the company found itself off price, without a compelling technical story and widely overdistributed in both the Adidas and Reebok brands.
But these days Adidas Group seems to be back on track. Despite an uncertain economic climate and the unprecedented manufacturing crunch, the Herzogenaurach, Germany-based athletic giant more than doubled its income in 2010, earning 567 million euros, or $806.4 million at current exchange. Annual revenue advanced 9 percent to hit 12 billion euros, or $17.1 billion. And in the challenging North American market, the group notched 14 percent sales growth for the Adidas brand and 22 percent for Reebok.
Hainer said there are issues ahead, particularly on the manufacturing side. Like almost every player in the space, the Adidas Group will raise prices on certain products for both brands in 2011 and 2012. “Price increases will come. We can’t do it without [them],” he said.
But even so, the company is pushing forward with an aggressive agenda.
In November, Hainer unveiled “Route 2015,” the firm’s five-year plan to boost sales to 17 billion euros by 2015, with growth in the U.S. market a critical element.
To support the expansion, on March 16 the group launched “All Adidas,” its biggest campaign to date and the first brand-focused effort since 2004. The global TV and Internet push is meant to help the brand re-establish its identity.
A rejuvenated Reebok is also getting its share of attention, particularly in the U.S. Its new natural-motion RealFlex line, which hits stores this month, is considered a big opportunity, Hainer said. And the brand’s long-moribund Classics line is being reanimated with help from hip-hop producer and artist Swizz Beatz, who signed a multiyear deal to serve as creative director of the segment.
Analyst Erwan Rambourg of London-based HSBC Bank said Reebok, in particular, has significant growth potential. “We’re quite bullish on Reebok,” Rambourg said. “We believe [the brand] has great opportunity to grow outside the U.S. this year and to grow outside footwear. There’s potential for good top-line growth, but also on margins.”
According to Ken Hicks, chairman, president and CEO of New York-based Foot Locker Inc., there’s momentum behind both Reebok and Adidas. “They’ve got a lot of things going on and they’re a tremendous partner,” he said. “When you look at new products, such as the Zig and Flex, and their move into basketball — the Dwight Howard and Derrick Rose Adidas shoes and the John Wall Zig [basketball shoe with Reebok] — it demonstrates their interest in developing this big part of the American athletic shoe business.”
Here, Hainer talks with FN about growing Reebok, keeping the supply chain in check and plotting Adidas’ path.
FN: “All Adidas” launched a few weeks ago. Why was now the right time to create a brand-building campaign?
HH: Our last [push] was in 2004 with “Impossible Is Nothing.” Since then, we’ve broken it up [and focused] on categories with football ads, basketball ads, etc. We said it’s time to bring it together again to show the consumer what Adidas is all about: It’s not just football and not just Originals. This is the biggest brand campaign that we have. We spent more money than we ever have before, and it seems to be working very well.
FN: The campaign is set through 2011. Will it carry through as the brand statement in 2012 and for the Olympics?
HH: It could be. We haven’t decided yet what we are doing in 2012. We’re already taking out parts of the campaign now for individual categories, so it might be that after we have done the grand campaign this year, we’ll break it up into categories again. We are the sponsor of the London Olympic Organizing Committee, so there is definitely big activity from us that you can expect in 2012.
FN: Basketball and running have taken center stage here in the U.S., both in ads and in your product initiatives. Are those the categories you’ll focus on going forward?
HH: At the end of the day, we have to have everything if we want to get to 17 billion euros in sales. But we have called out a few [categories] where we see the biggest growth potential: running, basketball and the fast-fashion vertical business model. And we have Reebok. In Reebok, we have so much more potential. We’ve just scratched the surface, and we have a lot of new ideas.
FN: Where are you with Reebok?
HH: We want to make it an international brand — as international as Adidas is — and we definitely can do it. We have infrastructure, we have subsidiaries all over the world, we have our offices and the people. But the stage that the brand is in is different from country to country, so for now, we need to harmonize it and internationalize it with one position and one clear message. We have said that in 2015 we definitely want to do 3 billion euro. In 2010, we had 1.9 billion. But my honest opinion is that that is conservative [as a target] because the potential has definitely begun. We will build a much bigger apparel business, not just in the three pillars — [EasyTone, Zig and the new RealFlex line] — but in general with the basic training gear, fitness gear, women’s and more. We’ll also be building Classics.
FN: The RealFlex lightweight, ultra-flexible running collection debuts globally this month. What are your expectations for it?
HH: This is a pillar that can become as big as EasyTone. The orders are extremely good, with broad-based distribution in the U.S. market. We really have high hopes for it.
FN: Toning has been particularly challenged in the U.S. What will you be doing to address the category going forward?
HH: We’re holding some products back. We are taking some of them and putting it into our factory outlets, and giving retailers newer products. We will further evolve EasyTone and come up with new innovations.
FN: You’ve spoken publicly about the opportunities for the brands in China, Russia and the U.S. Are there other areas you’re looking at as well?
HH: In the future, India can become a big market. I don’t know how fast it will grow, but the potential is definitely there. When you look just at the Cricket World Cup’s power, how excited people there are, [it’s clear that India] can be a big market.
FN: Is that a near-term or long-term opportunity?
HH: Long term, I think. I have to look long term and manage short term.
FN: On a broader scale, rising materials costs have been a huge pressure across the industry. What is your take?
HH: It’s definitely a challenge. When you see the input prices and, to a certain extent, labor costs, this is something we haven’t experienced at this magnitude. Cotton has doubled in the last 12 months, and polyester, rubber, oil, everything went up. And obviously, we want to protect our margin and our profit to give what we can to the shareholders. But [these increases] are not coming gradually. They’re coming harshly and in a short period of time, and we don’t have much experience [dealing with those conditions].
FN: How will the Adidas Group address the increases?
HH: We’re trying to mitigate it from different angles. On the one hand, we’ll try to improve and be more efficient and faster in and take the costs out in our supply chain. On the other hand, we’ll try to re-engineer some of the products without jeopardizing quality, functionality or innovation. And last, we will increase prices. The consumer has to take their fair share as well. Therefore, price increases will come.
FN: What do you mean, “re-engineer”?
HH: We have to look more intensely into many of our products and ask, what is the real benefit for the consumer, what is the real functionality? You don’t need to always add the whistles and bells to every product. We always try to make the best running shoe, the best basketball shoe, but sometimes when you give designers too much freedom, they make Ferraris when you only need a BMW.
FN: How have your customers reacted to prices going up?
HH: Obviously, no retail partner is jumping with excitement when you tell them we have to have price increases. But it’s quite simple. I say, “Do you want your margin to suffer? No. Should my margin suffer? No.” So we have to do it.
FN: How long do you predict this inflationary period will last?
HH: I’m not an expert in raw materials, so I have to ask our expert and they ask the other experts. On the oil side, you have this Libya war; on the cotton side, you have the flooding in Pakistan and in Thailand. What we hear is pricing in cotton may have peaked because more and more cotton fields are coming back. Oil, we have to see what’s going on in the Middle East. Rubber is absorbed by the car industry at the moment. I don’t think that rises will be that steep anymore, but I’m not here to say the worst is over because nobody can predict that.
FN: Have you taken any action on the factory side to increase efficiency?
HH: We have consolidated manufacturing heavily in the last 10 years, mainly on the footwear side. We don’t produce by ourselves, so we are working closely with our main suppliers, asking them, “How do you see the labor situation and government restrictions or import tariffs going forward?” and together with them we are building up our sourcing strategy.
FN: Are you looking into factories outside China?
HH: [Our partners] are investing in other countries, but still the majority [of the production] will stay in China. When you see our plans for 2015 — and Nike has announced their plans and they also want to grow — there is more capacity needed. And you can’t do it without China.
FN: Are you concerned that price increases and the general economic situation could dampen consumer spending?
HH: Yeah, but when you look at 2010, the [economic] situation was the same and people bought our shoes. Otherwise, we wouldn’t have grown by 1.6 billion [euros in sales]. If you give the consumer a reason to buy, then they are still spending. So that is always what we are trying to do: bring new, innovative products to the market.http://www.wwd.com/footwear-news?module=tn#/article/footwear-news/adi-dazzle-qa-with-herbert-hainer-3578652
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Desktops Lenovo ThinkCentre Edge 91z leaks out: a 21.5-inch all-in-one desktop with optional boot drive
If you're looking for a sleek, angular slab of an all-in-one desktop computer, Lenovo may have the machine for you, as we've just intercepted plans for this unannounced ThinkCentre Edge 91z, and she's most definitely a beaut. According to the leaked PDF, Lenovo will fully reveal the 21.5-inch, 1080p desktop in just two days and ship it in June, but for now we can tell you that it can be configured with low-power Intel Core i7 processors, discrete ATI graphics and a 80GB mSATA auxiliary SSD -- the latter of which Lenovo says can boot in just 20 seconds. You'll also find HDMI output and VGA input to connect (or use the 91z as) a second screen, a "spill proof" wireless keyboard, VESA mounting options and a built-in carrying handle. Expect prices to range between $700 and $1200 when it hits the market, if these slides are correct.
[Thanks, Andrew] http://networkedblogs.com/hU5w5
[Thanks, Andrew] http://networkedblogs.com/hU5w5
ZRO INTERVIEW BY JULIA BEVERLY OF OZONE MAGAZINE
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Behind the Scenes: @DaKennel Yeah Yeah Video Shoot
A quick look on the set with Ohio's finest Da Kennel, Ampichino, Ray Cash, Britni Elise, Al Fatz, Young Ray, & CJ Platinum also featuring Z-107.9fm's Tropikana, DJ Ice, DJ StepOne
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Monday, May 9, 2011
Sunday, May 8, 2011
LLOYD BANKS WITH RYAN LESLIE- SO FORGETFUL
Saturday, May 7, 2011
#FELLASBEHOLD HEAUX GOING TURKEY HAM
Friday, May 6, 2011
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