Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 9:11 PM on Sunday, August 18th, 2019
30 days ago, American Creek Resources (AMK:TSXV) was well known only amongst investors that believe in the Golden Triangle of Northern B.C. Then, it all changed overnight when Eric Sprott stated the following on July 19, 2019 about the Company’s Treaty Creek project:
“It’s drilling a monster play just like the GT Gold play … It’s in the perfect logistical place to develop it …. what we’re shooting for is to define a 10 or 20-million-ounce discovery, so you’re paying nothing for this discovery.â€
To add further fuel to the fire, the Company’s JV partner is Tudor Gold, whose CEO (Walter Storm) startup funded Osisko to a $4.5 BILLION market cap. Drill results were so good at the end of July that Tudor Gold brought in a second drill, while Eric Sprott personally invested $1,000,000 into AMK 8 days later. If 3rd party validation is important to you in the world of gold exploration, it doesn’t get better than having Eric Sprott and Walter Storm in your corner.
Grab your favourite cold beverage and watch this interview with CEO Darren Blaney and Investor Relations officer Kelvin Burton …. the laughter and smiles on their faces are priceless.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 7:03 PM on Sunday, August 18th, 2019
Filed this week with the US Patent Office a provisional patent application for a New Internet Communication Protocol
The protocol will enable a smoother transition of legacy systems into the distributed digital economy, or Web 3.0.
Montreal – August 18, 2019 – St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE:SX)(OTC:SXOOF) (FSE:85G1) is pleased to inform the public that its subsidiary, ZeU Crypto Networks Inc., has filed this week with the US Patent Office a provisional patent application for a New Internet Communication Protocol. The protocol will enable a smoother transition of legacy systems into the distributed digital economy, or Web 3.0.
ZeU’s Internet of Ledgers
starts with a communication protocol enabling infinite, distributed, and
trustless network connections on data, executable code, digital assets,
and the next big thing yet to be invented.
The US Provisional Patent: “A
Method and System for a Transactional Decentralized Communication
Protocol Infrastructure; (Using ZeU Cross-Chain Multi-Chain Atomic
Swap)”
This patent describes a
method to create a highly-scalable, smart contract-less communication
protocol, much like TCP/IP, using distributed consensus, an atomic
transaction framework, Unspent Transaction Output (UTXO), and a
Byzantine Fault Tolerance standard. This protocol leverages the
cross-chain, multi-chain particularities of ZeU’s Atomic Swap.
Decentralized Transactional Communication Protocol (DTCP)
The Decentralized
Transactional Communication Protocol (DTCP) is a grassroots alternative
to tackle DLT-based industry problems such as interoperability and
scalability. It enables any number of participants to communicate in a
transactional way. They can exchange data (even executable code or
direct streaming bytes packets) or digital assets or both. It can create
communication channels in a continuous or one-time manner. The protocol
does not use blockchain or a token and is ledger-agnostic, as it uses a
user protocol-centric approach to decentralized escrows. It is
decentralized utilizing a network of nodes, which mine the transaction
in a specific way.
The protocol leverages
participants’ virtual machines (VM) to create a scalable alternative to
Lightning Networks or state channels.
The protocol uses a mix of
distributed VMs and derives asymmetric encryption (BIP32), multisig
digital wallets, and a transactional flow. To settle on mutually agreed
terms, participants synchronize and accept the mutual terms of
communications, much like TCP/IP and SSL handshakes, to establish
commitments. The protocol is built for all participants and nodes to
verify the authenticity and the validity of any transactional request.
It uses a decentralized escrow system to disable double-spends and other
such attacks.
The protocol is Byzantine
fault-tolerant and follows a UTXO approach using the concept of
commitment rollbacks. These rollback commitments are established at the
same time as the request commitments on a hard fail or a timeout-based
on the length, i.e. number of Participants, in the transaction chain.
The protocol can enable use cases such as:
– High Volume/Speed Trading;
– Micropayments;
– DApp ledger interoperability;
– Streaming;
– Exchange of distributed executable logic, similar to smart contracts.
Frank Dumas, CEO of ZeU Crypto Networks, commented: “(…) DTCP
is built for Web 3.0. It’s a grassroots way to redefine asynchronous
distributed communication in a decentralized way which removes the need
for trust between third parties. It will enable interoperability,
scalability, and a token-less economic model in the world of digital
assets as data, cryptocurrency, and distributed executable code, such as
smart contracts, using methods similar to the emergence of internet
protocols (…) as a communication protocol, DTCP is ledger-agnostic and
enables any number of participants in any transaction. As the web
transit to the digital economy, this protocol allows any participant to
create their own mini internet with other participants (…) this newest
addition to ZeU’s IP portfolio should grow our pool of commercial
opportunities exponentially. To accelerate its universal adoption, a
dedicated team will be working around the clock to publish a
comprehensive proof of concept to use by third-party developers before
year-end. (…)
Use Cases of the DTCP Protocol
Use Case 1: High volume micropayments for streaming involving Alice, Bob, and Chris
Alice has an online paid
streaming engine (AliceApp) and distributes content to her users in
exchange for crypto micro-payment. Bob and Chris are consumers of
Alice’s service. Bob pays in ETH and Chris in BTC. Bob and Chris put an
amount of asset (1 ETH, 0.1 BTC) into their AliceApp account by enabling
it to be held in escrow. Note that Alice does NOT have the funds yet,
but she can prove the funds exists and are available.
Bob and Chris create a streaming request, i.e., a transaction request, by clicking on the video to start.
AliceApp will start trading
streaming packets in exchange for Bob and Chris’ pseudo-transaction
signed receipt, perhaps 0.00001 ETH or 0.000001 BTC per megabytes. The
payments are settled only when one of the two conditions are met.
– Agreed schedule, e.g., AliceApp as a 24h settlement cycle;
– The total committed amount of any participant is met, e.g., Chris has reached 0.1 BTC.
Use Case 2: DApp interoperable remittance system with David, Esther, and Kate
DavidApp is a gambling DApp
enabling participants to bet on live sporting matches built on EOS.
EstherApp is a remittance micro-payment system built on BCH. Kate is a
DavidApp user. David is using EstherApp to reward the winner using the
user’s chosen asset.
Kate is playing DavidApp by
sending her bet from her mobile device while she is enjoying the match.
Every time she places a bet, she sends the related data and an asset,
e.g., 0.00001 ETH, which she has requested to be rewarded with BCH.
Multiple times within the established time frame, e.g., the length of
the match, Kate wins, and DavidApp responds with a winning event in
which he rewards Kate with 0.01 BCH.
Kate receives her BCH, if
applicable, from EstherApp at the end of the match, the agreed cycle.
She was able to bet hundreds of times, sometimes winning, sometimes
losing. David also has access to the ETH at the end of the match.
EstherApp exchanges a sum of ETH for the required BCH and the EOS to pay
for the platform bandwidth.
EstherApp may use a multilateral atomic swap with its affiliated partner to ensure liquidity in any requested digital asset.
Use Case 3: Decentralized Liquidity Pool with George, Hannah, Iris, Jared & Kalvin
All
Liquidity Pool Participants desire easy access to each other’s
available assets to create liquidity for their application, e.g.,
EstherApp in Use Case 2.
– George has BTC
– Hannah has BCH
– Iris has LTC
– Jared has XRP
– Kalvin has ETH
All
participants commit funds to the pool. Note that none of the other
participants have access to any of the funds but can have their funds
returned.
The participants can
exchange pseudo-transactions, either micro or macro, which will only
settle once the agreed-upon cycle is met or any participant has reached
their committed funds.
Note
that the participants can use a transaction bridge to automate the
repopulation/refund of their escrow accounts using distributed code
logic and trusted signals, i.e., oracles, e.g. a DApp signal based on
asset fluctuation price.
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
“Frank Dumas”
FRANK DUMAS
DIRECTOR & COO, ST-GEORGES ECO-MINING
PRESIDENT & CEO, ZEU CRYPTO NETWORKS
The
Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) has not reviewed and does not accept
responsibility for the adequacy or the accuracy of the contents of this
release.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 11:01 AM on Friday, August 16th, 2019
SPONSOR: CardioComm Solutions (EKG: TSX-V)
– The heartbeat of cardiovascular medicine and telemedicine. Patented
systems enable medical professionals, patients, and other healthcare
professionals, clinics, hospitals and call centres to access and manage
patient information in a secure and reliable environment.
EKG: TSX-V ———————-
Consumers want mobile health convenience
According to an article in HealthPayer Intelligence published on May 16, 2018, “Telehealth is a promising opportunity to increase member engagement because a greater number of individuals are open to the use of telehealth services.
Telehealth and remote care provide an exceptional customer experience opportunity for payers.
by Mike Greiwe, MD
According to an article in HealthPayer Intelligence
published on May 16, 2018, “Telehealth is a promising opportunity to
increase member engagement because a greater number of individuals are
open to the use of telehealth services. Telehealth and remote care
provide an exceptional customer experience opportunity for payers.
Consumers want telehealth as a convenient way to receive checkups,
preventive care and non-critical services without the need for travel
and wait times.â€
A study cited by mHealth Intelligence suggests patients are willing,
the technology is ready, but clinical providers and insurance payers
have lagged behind data that show patients are ready for the convenience
found in mobile health applications. Of the 400 consumers surveyed, 77%
said they would be more likely to pick a doctor who offered
telemedicine applications over one that hadn’t yet adopted the
technology. Data showed the reasons behind the interest in mobile health
virtual visits included that:
Patients want the option of skipping a time-consuming trip to the doctor for a simple recheck or non-urgent visit; and
Short wait times and the convenience of receiving a virtual house call are attractive to patients.
When combined with data showing that telehealth reduces costs in the
medical practice, it seems clear there are new options in health care
that may improve the bottom line.
Keep the customer satisfied — Mobile health in the orthopedic practice
According to a Beckers Hospital CFO Report, “This direct link between
patient satisfaction and revenue will likely become stronger because
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has set a goal of
linking 90% of Medicare payments to quality or value by 2018.â€
Although many orthopedic providers continue to express their concern
that patients will not be willing to evolve from traditional visits, the
most recent research does not hold up this assumption. A 2017 Advisory
Board study of patients’ attitudes toward the virtual visits shows 77%
would be willing to at least try the model.
The Accenture study highlighted what patients say are the primary benefits of telehealth:
• faster diagnosis and treatment;
• reduced costs;
• providing and receiving high-quality care;
• more flexibility in scheduling; and
• time savings for physicians and doctors.
A 2018 article in The New England Journal of Medicine
suggests the current model of traditional in-patient visits will
eventually be flipped to the visit of last resort over mobile health or
telehealth options. The authors suggested, “Face-to-face interactions
will certainly always have a central role in health care, and many
patients prefer to see their physician in person. However, a system
focused on high-quality non-visit care would work better for many others
— and quite possibly for physicians as well.â€
Some of the systems leading the way are Kaiser Permanente, with 52%
of their 100 million-plus patient encounters each year conducted as
virtual visits. However, a large health system has the budget to
establish telehealth applications while retraining clinical providers
and their patients on best practices for using the service. How can a
small medical practice find the time and energy to reinvent itself under
a mobile health framework?
The answer may lie in the individual practice seeking innovative ways
to obtain a competitive advantage. An article by a solo orthopedist in AAOS Now
recounted his experience in using telehealth applications to treat
postoperative patients. His decision to use the technology was tied to
improved patient experience, lower overheads and higher quality of care.
Is it time for your practice to discuss the opportunities to offer
mobile health as an option for your patients? OrthoLive has developed a
cloud-based affordable telehealth model designed specifically for the
orthopedic practitioner. Contact us to find out more.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 10:30 AM on Friday, August 16th, 2019
SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)
Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14
million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has
interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro
Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information
EV’s will make nickel a once-in-a-generation investment opportunity, says BHP
More EVs and more nickel in each of them will drive nickel demand through the roof, says the head of BHP’s Nickel West arm.
His forecast is great news for those juniors with large nickel deposits awaiting development, such as the Jaguar project just acquired by Centaurus from Brazilian giant Vale.
The display of oomph at last week’s Diggers & Dealers conference in Kalgoorlie was not restricted to the gold stocks.
The nickel stocks made sure of that, with none other than BHP leading
the charge in a presentation by its Nickel West president, Eddy Haegel.
Nickel West is the formerly unloved BHP unit that has come into its
own in response to what Haegel described as a once-in-a-generation
opportunity presented by the gathering nickel-rich battery boom.
Haegel said that in addition to the rapid growth in electric vehicles
sales, BHP expects nickel-in-vehicle demand to surge, driven by three
factors.
The first is batteries are becoming bigger to improve vehicle range
and performance. Next, nickel-based cathodes are taking market share
from non-nickel cathodes because they’re “simply betterâ€.
And finally, increasing nickel in battery chemistries increases energy density, delivering better performance and lower costs.
“It is important to understand that a 60kwh NMC811 battery needs 9kg
of cobalt, 11kg of lithium and a massive 70kg of nickel,†Haegel said.
While stainless steel still accounts for about 70% of nickel
consumption, batteries is the fast growing subset, to the point where
EV’s alone could account for all of the current production in the late
2020s.
Haegel sounded a note of caution about the here and now. While BHP
thinks there is going to be a significant increase in global nickel
demand, it is a case of not just yet.
“We do not expect to see a meaningful impact on the nickel market
from batteries until the mid – late 2020s. Only then, do we expect to
see serious industry investment by Class 1 nickel producers,’’ Haegel
said.
“However, we will not rest waiting for that day to arrive. We are
actively developing options to position ourselves for this
once-in-a-generation opportunity.’’
It is against that backdrop that the nickel price has been a strong
performer of late. The current price of $US7.17/lb compares with the
2018 (calendar) average of $US5.95/lb, and the 2017 average $US4.72/lb.
CENTAURUS METALS:
Talking about once-in-a-generation opportunities, Centaurus Metals
(CTM, trading at 0.9c for a market cap of $24m) has just seized one
which gives it a ticket to the battery-led nickel party discussed above.
In what was probably the most significant announcement by a junior at
D&D, Centaurus made everyone sit up and take notice when it
revealed it had struck an option deal to acquire the Jaguar nickel
sulphide project in Brazil from Vale, no less.
Jaguar comes with a foreign resource estimate of a near-surface
40.4mt grading 0.78% nickel for a total of 315,000t of contained metal
across a cluster of deposits, with lots of exploration upside to boot.
It is a lot of nickel for a company with a $24m market, particularly,
as was mentioned here on May 31 when Centaurus was trading at 0.8c, its
market value is pretty much covered by its Jambreiro iron ore project
in Minas Gerais state.
Assume long-term-term iron ore prices of $US60-$80/t, Jambreiro could
be good for $A20-$A25m in pre-tax operating cashflow. But it is not in
production and it has to be said its importance to Centaurus has been
overwhelmed by Jaguar.
Jaguar sits in the western portion of the Carajas mineral province
and covers 30sqkm of land containing the known foreign resource estimate
(based on 55km of diamond drilling by Vale) and at least four
exploration targets.
To complete the acquisition, Centaurus is up for a $US250,000 upfront
cash payment, the transfer of its Salobo West copper-gold exploration
tenements to Vale, two deferred payments totalling $US6.75m and a
production royalty of 0.75%.
Vale will have offtake rights (its Onca-Puma nickel mine is in the
region) and importantly, preliminary metallurgical testwork by Vale has
indicated a high-grade and quality nickel concentrate can be produced
from Jaguar’s sulphide mineralisation.
It is not a deal that would have been available to others as it
reflects both Centaurus’ long-term commitment to Brazil and Vale’s
interest in Salobo West, which is near its Salobo mine, its biggest
copper operation.
Centaurus hits the Eastern States next week to promote the Jaguar
deal and assuming a good reception, raising some funds to get cracking
on Jaguar’s near-term potential as an open-cut producer from higher
grade sections of its resource base will a key talking point.
VENTUREX:
Venturex boss AJ Saverimutto had a good reason to be wearing a sharp
suit at an investor lunch at the Palace Hotel on the opening day of the D
& D conference.
AJ had just announced Venturex (VXR, trading at 18c for a market cap
of $54m) had locked away a $100m senior debt funding package with
commodities trader Trafigura for its Sulphur Springs copper-zinc project
in the Pilbara, 145km south of Port Hedland.
The debt deal means that Sulphur Springs is pretty much on its way –
once the equity component of the $169m capex project is locked away – to
becoming Australia’s next base metals producer in an ASX market where
leveraged investment opportunities for copper in particular are thin on
the ground.
As much as nickel is needed for batteries in the electric vehicle and
the storage of renewable energy revolution, copper is even more so.
About 80kg of the red metal is required for an EV alone, a fact that
underwrites expectations that the world will be short about 4mpta of
copper come 2025.
Sulphur Springs’ high-grades – it nets out at about 3.3% copper
equivalent – from five years of open cut mining, followed by five years
of underground mining as the starting point, makes it a development for
the times.
Based on realistic metal price assumptions, the 1.2mtpa operation
(easily expandable to 2mtpa on the conversion of exploration upside to
additional resources/reserves) will generate revenue of about $209/t and
a before-tax margin of $65/t.
Multiply that out and Sulphur Springs is good for about $80m in
average annual free cashflow, or $800m over the initial 10 year mine
life. That’s why Venturex has been able to lock away the $100m in debt
funding in a market where debt funding for projects held by juniors is
virtually non-existent.
Northern Star has been a supporter of the story since 2012 and is Venturex’s biggest shareholder with a 19.8% stake.
AJ said a number of equity options would be looked at to complete the
financing, including the possible introduction of a strategic partner
who would be happy with Trafigura’s 100% offtake for the first 11 years,
50% thereafter.
Broker valuations of the stock which pre-date the debt component of
Sulphur Springs, a major de-risking event if there ever was one, were
multiples of the current price.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 10:11 AM on Friday, August 16th, 2019
EGLX: TSX-V
Adds over 2 million followers to combined network of over 200 million
Signed international Fortnite influencer, Yelo, to its roster of over 50 professional esports players and video gaming influencers.
Yelo’s combined social network reaches over 2 million followers across all social channels, a substantial addition to the 200 million plus fans the combined organization currently reaches.
TORONTO, Aug. 16, 2019 — Enthusiast Gaming Holdings Inc. (TSXV: EGLX) (OTCQB: EGHIF), (“Enthusiast†or the “Companyâ€), one of the largest vertically integrated video gaming media companies in North America, is excited to announce that Luminosity Gaming (“Luminosityâ€) has signed international Fortnite influencer, Yelo, to its roster of over 50 professional esports players and video gaming influencers. Yelo’s combined social network reaches over 2 million followers across all social channels, a substantial addition to the 200 million plus fans the combined organization currently reaches.
The amalgamation of Enthusiast and Luminosity creates one of the
largest esports organizations in the world. The organization is
comprised of the top players and content creators in the esports
ecosystem. Yelo joins Luminosity’s team of players and influencers which
currently reaches over 60 million followers across social media.
Combined with Enthusiast’s network of over 150 million monthly visitors,
the collective reach totals over 200 million gaming enthusiasts across
85 websites, 900 YouTube channels, 8 professional esports teams and over
50 social influencers.
Steve Maida, President of Luminosity commented, “We
are excited to sign Yelo to our talent roster and social audience of 60
million followers. With over 2 million social media followers, he is
rapidly growing into one of the biggest Fortnite influencers on the
scene. Yelo joining the Luminosity and Enthusiast Gaming family
of players is further validation of the Luminosity brand power as one
of the fastest growing esports organizations in the world, attracting
top talent in the industry.â€
About Enthusiast Gaming
Enthusiast Gaming is one of the largest vertically integrated video
game companies and has the fastest-growing online community of video
gamers. Through the Company’s organic and acquisition strategy, it has
amassed a platform of over 150 million monthly visitors across its
network of websites and YouTube channels. Enthusiast also owns and
operates Canada’s largest gaming expo, Enthusiast Gaming Live Expo,
EGLX, (eglx.ca) with approximately 55,000 people attending in 2018. For more information on the Company, visit www.enthusiastgaming.com.
About Luminosity Gaming
Luminosity Gaming is one of the largest globally recognized esports
organizations in the world, with over 60 million registered active
users. Luminosity has 8 world class esports teams competing across top
games such as Fortnite, Apex, Rainbow Six: Seige, Counter Strike, Call
of Duty, Madden, Smite, etc. For more information visit www.luminosity.gg
CONTACT INFORMATION:
Investor Relations: Julia Becker Head of Investor Relations & Marketing [email protected] (604) 785.0850
This news release contains certain statements that may constitute
forward-looking information under applicable securities laws. All
statements, other than those of historical fact, which address
activities, events, outcomes, results, developments, performance or
achievements that Enthusiast anticipates or expects may or will occur in
the future (in whole or in part) should be considered forward-looking
information. Such information may involve, but is not limited to,
comments with respect to strategies, expectations, planned operations
and future actions of the Company. Often, but not always,
forward-looking information can be identified by the use of words such
as “plans”, “expects”, “is expected”, “budget”, “scheduled”,
“estimates”, “forecasts”, “intends”, “anticipates”, or “believes” or
variations (including negative variations) of such words and phrases, or
statements formed in the future tense or indicating that certain
actions, events or results “may”, “could”, “would”, “might” or “will”
(or other variations of the forgoing) be taken, occur, be achieved, or
come to pass. Forward-looking information is based on currently
available competitive, financial and economic data and operating plans,
strategies or beliefs as of the date of this news release, but involve
known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors
that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of
Enthusiast to be materially different from any future results,
performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking
information. Such factors may be based on information currently
available to Enthusiast, including information obtained from third-party
industry analysts and other third-party sources, and are based on
management’s current expectations or beliefs regarding future growth,
results of operations, future capital (including the amount, nature and
sources of funding thereof) and expenditures. Any and all
forward-looking information contained in this press release is expressly
qualified by this cautionary statement. Trading in the securities of
the Company should be considered highly speculative.
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services
Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture
Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this
release.
The securities of the Corporation have not been and will not be
registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended
and may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration
or an applicable exemption from the registration requirement. This press
release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an
offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of the securities in any
jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be
unlawful.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 1:52 PM on Thursday, August 15th, 2019
SPONSOR: Esports Entertainment
$GMBL Esports audience is 350M, growing to 590M, Esports wagering is
projected at $23 BILLION by 2020. The company has launched VIE.gg
esports betting platform and has accelerated affiliate marketing
agreements with 190 Esports teams. Click here for more information
GMBL: OTCQB
———————–
Kellogg’s shifts sports-related ad spending to esports
The advertiser is shifting more advertising spending to esports because it offers something that most traditional sports cannot — almost unprecedented access to younger people between the ages of 21 and 34 who have high incomes.
For Kellogg’s, esports has gone from an experimental investment to a continuous one
Competitive gaming campaigns are now a staple, rather than a test, on media plans for most Kellogg’s brands.
The advertiser is shifting more advertising spending to esports
because it offers something that most traditional sports cannot — almost
unprecedented access to younger people
between the ages of 21 and 34 who have high incomes. Since it jumped on
the esports bandwagon two years ago, Kellogg’s has steadily made
inroads, moving from experiential activations at tournaments to being
the headline sponsor of them. For Kellogg’s, esports has gone from an
experimental investment to a continuous one, said Dominik Schafhaupt,
marketing manager for snacks in Northern Europe at Kellogg’s.
The scale of those investments will flex depending on the brand and
its target audience as well the market they are based in, said
Schafhaupt who revealed that the advertiser is changing how it funds its
association with esports now that it’s a mainstay on media plans.
Previously, advertisers like Kellogg’s dipped into sponsorship budgets
to fund early forays into the world of competitive gaming. But as the
stakes of making those activations work got bigger so too did the budgets for them, which meant advertisers turned to digital and broader marketing budgets.
“Esports is an element of our communications mix, and there isn’t a single spend pillar it is funded by,†said Schafhaupt.
Perhaps nowhere is this more obvious at Kellogg’s than on its Pringles brand.
The snacks brand has paid to sponsor the League of Legends European
Championships this summer in a deal with its organizer Riot Games. The
partnership comes just seven months after Kellogg’s signed a deal with
gaming community N3rd Street Gamers, which runs its own tournaments.
Marketing partnerships like this tend to average around $2 million
(£1.6 million) to $4 million (£3.3 million) per year and are often done
as multiyear deals, said Rich Routman, president at sports media company
Minute Media. Generally, deals like the one between Kellogg’s and Riot
Games usually consist of marketing rights similar to standard sports
leagues with broadcaster advertising placements, event marketing assets
and marketing partnership rights across the vertical crucial to the
company’s business, said Routman. Yet how all of those assets are added up for commercial fees depends on the seller.
Since there is such a difference in maturity between esports
organizations, sponsorship costs and assets can greatly differ and the
market hasn’t had time to mature properly to dictate the costs.
The deal between Kellogg’s and Riot Games, for instance, is based on
one of several tiered packages sold by the latter. Each package is
weighted toward either media exposure or experiential activations, which
are supported by media impressions and a rate card for the various
assets that can be used. Having that scope between each package means
Riot can create bespoke sponsorships depending on what an advertiser
wants, said Alban Dechelotte, head of business development and
sponsorship for Riot Games.
The Pringles logo will appear on the streams of the tournaments
alongside a call to action when players are entering the game. Those
streams — and subsequently the Pringles brand — will be on both YouTube
and Twitch, which are watched on average by 1.6 million people daily
during the normal season of League of Legends matches, according to Riot
Games. The number of people watching the matches at the same time each
week has hit a peak of over 300,000, up 40% for the same event in 2018,
according to Riot Games.
“Gaming and esports are places where our core target group is, and so
now is the time to get into the community around competitive gaming,â€
said Schafhaupt.
Aside from media exposure, Kellogg’s is also exploring in-game activations.
Millions of Pringles cans across Europe will sport a unique code that
players can redeem to take part in a raffle to win rare characters to
use in the game. Unlike similar activations, which can feel gimmicky,
Kellogg’s is hoping its decision to allow people to use the code to
redeem characters that have been retired and, therefore, are unavailable
swells its cache among the notoriously advertising-adverse gaming
audience.
“I would love to measure my sales off the back of the sponsorship,
but I can’t because we have distribution partners that sit between us
and consumers,†said Schafhaupt. “At the moment, the industry looks at
measurement in esports from a media-value perspective. It’s one of the
areas we’re building on with the sponsorship by looking at how the
community responds to our brand and also the redemption rates of the
code.â€
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 11:34 AM on Thursday, August 15th, 2019
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Cannabis industry overview: all you need to know
Consumers around the world spent around $12.2 billion on legal cannabis in 2018, according to marijuana research firm BDS Analytics, rising from around $9.5 billion in 2017 and $6.9 billion in 2016.
The firm predicts spending this year will jump 38% to $16.9 billion and believes the industry will deliver a compound annual sales growth of 27% from 2018 to 2022, at which time it expects the market to be worth over $31 billion.
Consumers around the world spent around $12.2 billion on legal
cannabis in 2018, according to marijuana research firm BDS Analytics,
rising from around $9.5 billion in 2017 and $6.9 billion in 2016. The
firm predicts spending this year will jump 38% to $16.9 billion and
believes the industry will deliver a compound annual sales growth of 27%
from 2018 to 2022, at which time it expects the market to be worth over
$31 billion.
Analysts at Jefferies, which reported similar spending figures for
2018 as BDS, believe the legal cannabis market could be worth as much as
$130 billion by 2029. However, that forecast assumes both medicinal and
recreational marijuana is broadly legalised in further major markets
like the US, Europe and Latin America, and that established industries
like pharmaceuticals, beauty and drinks producers start using it in new
products. If the legal picture remained largely the same as it is now,
then the market’s estimated value in a decade is just $50 billion –
which is a huge jump from where sales sit now but ultimately way below
the full potential that could be delivered if the drug was embraced
further.
It is clear the market is set for exponential growth over the coming
years. The global market for illegal marijuana is estimated to be worth
somewhere in the region of $150 billion to $200 billion, so the
legalised market has all that value to chase in addition to new
opportunities, such as formulating new alternative cannabis-based
products.
What is driving the cannabis market forward?
Below are some of the key reasons why the legalised cannabis market is driving forward.
Deregulation and acceptance
From a recreational standpoint, marijuana is the most widely used
drug in the world. Although it still won’t be for everyone, legalisation
is attracting new types of users – and most of them have already tried
marijuana before. According to Deloitte, legalisation is expected to
‘attract more of a conservative experimenter’, those with bigger incomes
and higher education than the typical user using the black market
today. Still, Deloitte reckons that nearly three quarters of all
consumers likely to use legalised marijuana have had prior experience
with recreational cannabis, and over 40% have used it in the past five
years.
There are only two countries that have formally legalised
recreational use of marijuana. Uruguay became the first country to fully
legalise marijuana back in 2013 and was followed by Canada last year.
However, recreational cannabis laws are relaxed in many other countries,
such as in the Netherlands and Portugal where the drug has been
decriminalised, and over 40 countries have legalised medicinal cannabis
in some form, some of which are outlined below:
Argentina
Australia
Canada
Chile
Colombia
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Finland
Germany
Greece
Irael
Italy
Jamaica
Luxembourg
Macedonia
Malta
Mexico
Netherlands
Norway
Peru
Poland
South Africa
South Korea
Sri Lanka
Switzerland
UK
Uruguay
Zimbabwe
The world is hoping Canada will be able to demonstrate how a fully
legalised marijuana industry can form part of a modern, industrialised
nation in the western world. But the next trigger moment that many are
waiting for is federal approval in the US. Medicinal marijuana has been
legalised by over 30 US states and a further 11 have approved
recreational use with more expected to follow in the coming years.
However, it is yet to be legalised at the federal level, which would
apply one law across the entire country rather than forcing companies to
operate on a state-by-state level.
The picture in Europe is similar. Individual countries are pushing
ahead with their own policies on marijuana use while the law at the EU
level lags behind. The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug
Addiction says ‘cannabis should be allowed only for “medical and
scientific purposes”‘ and that most countries still regard possession as
a crime that can result in imprisonment. Yet, it adds that several
member states have reduced their penalties for cannabis users, and some
have permitted supply of the drug, which it admits is opening up
discussion. It says European policy is complicated by ‘conflicting
claims’, including decriminalisation or legalisation, medical or
recreational use, and policy success or failure. The initial sign is
that Europe is warming more to reducing the harm of drugs and
decriminalising them, but is further away from embracing the drug in the
same way North America has.
Acceptance of marijuana use is growing. Mexico and Argentina are
leading the charge in Latin America. South Africa and Zimbabwe have
taken the first steps in Africa, while South Korea recently became one
of the first major Asian nations to take steps to make medicinal
marijuana legal.
Billions of investment
There are serious sums being ploughed into this new market as
companies try to get ahead of the game. Data from Dealogic shows there
was over $10 billion worth of mergers and acquisitions (M&A)
activity in the marijuana industry last year – seven times higher than
2017 and not far off the value of the entire legalised cannabis market
worldwide.
Much of the money is coming from well-regarded, established
businesses operating in the pharmaceutical, tobacco, alcohol and
consumer goods businesses that are coming under increasing pressure to
formulate a marijuana strategy as acceptance grows. For example, Constellation Brands,
the maker of Corona beer, completed the biggest deal to date in the
industry after investing $4 billion into Canopy as it pursues new
opportunities in areas like cannabis-infused beverages.
Some have taken a more collaborative approach, with the likes of Molson Coors working with Canadian grower HEXO to develop cannabis-infused drinks, and Canadian cannabis giant Tilray teaming up with both alcohol giant ABInBev and pharmaceutical powerhouse Novartis.
Consolidation among cannabis pure-plays is expected to accelerate over
the coming years, as is the amount of cross-sector investment coming
from other industries.
New cannabis-based products will also widen the appeal of the market
and the growth opportunity for both medicinal and recreational
marijuana. The key for the medicinal market will be providing proven
cannabidiol (CBD) products that can be safely dosed and delivered
without the need to smoke. For the recreational market, where smoking
marijuana will remain (at least in the short term) the preferred method
of choice, the possibilities are endless – baked goods, drinks, olive
oil and honey are just some of the products being infused with cannabis
at present. These ‘edibles’, as they are known, will start to take off
in Canada this year after the government forbid the sale of them during
the first year of recreational use being legalised.
Developing new cannabis products will be key to adoption and uptake.
The main reasons that marijuana users are likely to move to the legal
market is because they expect to get things the black market can’t
offer: such as guaranteed and verifiable quality, new products, or
because they have more control over the potency and type of cannabis
product they purchase.
What could hold the cannabis market back?
Below are some of the key reasons why the legalised cannabis market could be held back.
Regulatory outlook
Although it is highly likely that more countries will embrace
marijuana in the coming years there are several major hurdles to clear.
Having marijuana legalised at the federal level in the US is the key
breakthrough many are waiting for. Letting states manage their own
legislation over the matter causes a string of problems for the market.
Many US cannabis companies can’t get access to banking or financial
services from large lenders in the country who are unwilling to lend to
what is regarded as a ‘grey area’. Marijuana grown in one state can not
be transferred and sold in another, which is one of the key reasons for
the acceleration in consolidation as firms race to buy their way in to
new markets. Marketing, distribution and security laws can also differ
state to state. The complex mismatch of legislation ultimately creates
an uncertain outlook for the US market and raises the costs of
operation.
It is important to stress that there is no guarantee marijuana will
be legislated at the federal level. Although many are expecting it to be
a hot topic in the 2020 election it is unlikely to be a make-or-break
policy area for candidates, especially if they can please both sides of
the argument (by raking in the profits of marijuana through state
legislation without publicly approving it at the federal level). Until
then, it is unlikely the current Republican government, regarded as far
less upbeat on the drug compared to their Democrat rivals, will look to
legalise marijuana at the federal level.
Those countries that have already embraced medicinal marijuana are
the most likely to legalise it at the recreational level. But many
countries that have embraced medicinal marijuana have done so
reluctantly. For example, the UK’s laws on medicinal cannabis are still
very strict and were only introduced following huge media and public
pressure over the case of a very ill 12-year-old boy who had found an
effective treatment using CBD oil. And yet, the UK is the largest
producer of medicinal cannabis in Europe – all of which it is more than
happy to export to the rest of the world.
The attitude in Europe is also vastly different to that of North
America. This is demonstrated by vaping, which in the UK is treated as a
smoking cessation aide aimed at getting people to quit smoking
cigarettes while in the US it is widely marketed much the same way
cigarettes were all those decades ago. While recreational use is common
in some member states there is no appetite to regulate it at the
EU-level. Medicinal marijuana will play a bigger role in Europe over the
coming years but there is unlikely to be any major shift in
recreational laws. While discussion in the US is around how far to take
legalisation and commercialisation, talk in Europe is more on
decriminalisation and reducing harm.
There is little doubt that legislation will warm to marijuana as time
goes on, but there is little certainty over how it will be embraced and
what regulatory model will be deployed.
Financing
As mentioned, the state-by-state management of the marijuana industry
in the US has made it difficult for some to get hold of proper
financing. While a handful of companies such as Tilray, Aurora and Canopy
have emerged as early leaders, none of them are profitable and yet all
of them require the huge sums needed to build an entirely new market and
supply chain. Acquiring and developing the vast land needed to grow the
product, the processing equipment, distribution capabilities and sales
channels is not cheap.
This is one of the reasons why many of the larger players have gone
public so early on, so they can access money from the markets. This has
not been the case in the past: many big tech names refrained from going
public during the tech boom because they had access to plenty of cash
from the banks and private equity. But even the lack of federal law to
govern marijuana in the US complicates things for publicly-listed firms.
For example, a publicly-listed company in Canada cannot operate a
cannabis operation in the US because it is not approved at the federal
level, but a publicly-listed firm in the US can operate anywhere so long
as it is legal there.
With that in mind, many cannabis stocks have funded mergers and
acquisitions using stock, diluting existing investors. Plus, many have
issued convertible notes that provide an immediate injection of cash
into the business but ultimately allow lenders to invest at a huge
discount later on, again diluting other shareholders and placing
pressure on share prices.
With the largest cannabis stocks valued on their future growth
potential rather than past performance, getting access to the crucial
finance needed to deliver that growth is vital.
Taxation and the black market
It can be forgotten that legalising cannabis is about undermining
illicit trade and bringing existing users out of the black market rather
than creating new users, although this will undoubtedly be one
consequence. For this to be successful, governments need to delicately
balance efforts between regulating the industry without placing it under
a huge cost burden.
Drug dealers don’t concern themselves with matters like tax, minimum
wages, cultivation licenses or sales permits. They will always be able
to produce marijuana at a far cheaper cost than a legal operation but
that does not mean legal cannabis can’t be profitable, just that they
won’t enjoy the vast margins enjoyed by illicit traders.
How legalised cannabis – particularly for the recreational market –
is priced will be key to attracting consumers. Data from Deloitte
suggests those currently buying cannabis through illegal channels are
willing to pay more for legal cannabis, so long as it is of a
certifiable quality. However, if legal cannabis is significantly pricier
than what can be bought from a drug dealer then there is a real risk
that many will return to the black market. This could end up being a
volatile cycle: if legal prices rise and waves of customers return to
the black market then there will be an oversupply of legal cannabis,
which in turn would eventually bring the price down again and attract
people back from the black market. In fact, prices in the black market
could be much more stable than that of the legal market. However, this
will not be the case in the medicinal market as it will offer products
designed for specific ailments that won’t be freely available on the
black market. This will also protect the ability of medicinal marijuana
products to charge a much higher price point than a recreational joint
or cannabis cookie.
It is clear, however, that creating a legal cannabis market will not
fully replace existing black markets overnight. Mexico is advancing
toward legalisation and that would represent a significant moment as it
would be the first country that has a prolific drug manufacturing
problem to do so. Still, Vicente Fox, the former president of Mexico
(2000-2006) and now board member of Canadian cannabis company Khiron Life Sciences,
has said legalisation in Mexico as well as the US (where most Mexican
drugs are smuggled into) will only cut around 40% of income flowing to
cartels – a sizeable chunk but far from the levels needed to cripple the
black market.
Governments need to ensure they do not overtax an industry that
already needs large sums to grow and look at the wider picture when
legislating the industry, such as how it could affect healthcare, social
and justice budgets.
Regulatory redtape
When a new industry is emerging there is a battle between industry
and government over who shapes the regulation and who responds to it.
More often than not, industry plays a major role in deciding how it is
regulated through lobbying and governments simply draw the lines of
where the regulation stops. For example, governments around the world
are still trying to figure out how to rein in the likes of Google and Facebook,
who have enjoyed huge regulatory freedom up until recently, and
cryptocurrencies are far from a clean-cut issue but are still being used
by people everyday.
The same will apply to the cannabis industry, which needs to convince
governments not to overburden it. But the health and social
implications of legalising any drug means governments will not allow the
industry to steam ahead like it has with big tech or cryptocurrencies.
However, governments and policy-makers move at a snail’s pace compared
to entrepreneurship and business, and this will slow the progress of
legalised cannabis firms. This has already proven true in places that
have embraced marijuana: initial tax revenues in Canada and California
were much lower than expected during the first year of legalisation
because regulatory red tape stopped the industry from realising its
potential. Big backlogs of sales permits and cultivation licenses were
to blame, demonstrating the infrastructure is not yet in place.
Finding the perfect formula that allows cannabis to be effectively
regulated without hampering the business opportunity will not be easy.
Bricks vs clicks
At a time when bricks-and-mortar stores are falling out of favour and
retailers are shifting their operations online, physical retail outlets
– recreational stores or medical dispensaries – are proving crucial for
legal marijuana sellers in North America. Around 95% of all legal
cannabis sales in some Canadian provinces including Quebec and Nova
Scotia are completed in a physical store with just 5% being bought
online. The need to see and feel the product and the desire to discuss
what is on offer with someone in-the-know is proving an important
selling point for consumers. This is a similar trend to what has
happened with vaping stores, which offer advice and the ability to try
different flavours or strains.
This model means another huge expense for the industry. Running
stores, hiring staff and investing in the logistical and distribution
capabilities needed to supply a network of stores is not cheap, and that
is exacerbated by the fact consumers expect them to be open for long
hours.
The need for a physical place to pick medicinal marijuana is greater
than the need for a store to buy recreational cannabis, in the same way
people prefer to go to a pharmacy to pick up a prescription. However,
more recreational consumers are likely to purchase online once they have
become familiar with the market and some companies are already banking
on this, such as Namaste Technologies which is being dubbed the ‘Amazon
of cannabis’. Although an online model will reduce the costs compared to
opening and running a network of stores, it adds greater pressure on
the need to have the ability to deliver products far and wide – and
quickly. Deloitte has found two-thirds of those willing to purchase
cannabis online expect it to be delivered for free and within two days.
Cannabis is the next big thing but is far from a risk-free ride
There is very good reason to be bullish on the future of cannabis but
finding where the true value in the market at this early stage is
difficult for investors. The biggest cannabis stocks like Tilray, Aurora
and Canopy have already been assigned huge valuations running into the
tens of billions of dollars when they only make hundreds of millions in
revenue each year and report large losses. As was the case with
companies like Twitter to Tesla, it will all be about maintaining
momentum and delivering growth over the coming years and turning to a
profit before the money runs out.
Others may be more attracted to the stocks from the pharmaceutical,
alcohol, tobacco or consumer goods industries that have dipped their toe
into the market because they have established businesses to fall back
on and the financial firepower needed to propel legal cannabis into the
mainstream.
It will be a slow ride for investors looking to get in early and far
from a risk-free journey. Many companies are spending big to carve out a
lead in the market but there is no guarantee that any of them will make
it.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 10:37 AM on Thursday, August 15th, 2019
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How Blockchain can further the cause of electric vehicles
According to researchers, EV charging infrastructure could get a further boost if blockchain is integrated into energy systems
Countries such as India and those in the European Union are pulling out all the steps to strengthen the EV ecosystem
Bengaluru: Charged up with the idea that electric
vehicles (EVs) hold the future of energy and transportation, many
countries such as India and those in the European Union are pulling out
all the steps to strengthen the EV ecosystem with battery storage
manufacturing plants, besides offering a host of financial and tax
incentives.
While all these initiatives are steps in the right direction, many
researchers believe the EV charging infrastructure could get a further
boost if blockchain is integrated into energy systems.
A new study by researchers at the University of Waterloo, for
instance, reveals that there is a lack of trust among charging service
providers, property owners and owners of EVs. With an open blockchain
platform, all parties will have access to the data and can see if it has
been tampered with, researchers insist. Their reasoning is that using a
blockchain-oriented charging system will allow EV owners to see if they
are being overcharged while property owners will know if they are being
underpaid.
Blockchain, primarily known for powering cryptocurrencies like
bitcoins, is a form of Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) that promises
to reduce costs and establish trust, but faces challenges like the
speed of processing transactions. Its popularity lies in the fact that
participants have a copy of the ledger’s data that contains the most
recent transactions or changes, thus reducing the need to establish trust using traditional methods.
“Energy services are increasingly being provided by entities that do
not have well-established trust relationships with their customers and
partners,” said Christian Gorenflo, a PhD candidate in Waterloo’s David
R. Cheriton School of Computer Science, in a 14 August press statement.
“In this context, blockchains are a promising approach for replacing a
central trusted party, for example, making it possible to implement
direct peer-to-peer energy trading,” he added.
In undertaking the study (recently published in the ‘Proceedings of
the Tenth ACM International Conference on Future Energy Systems’),
Gorenflo, his supervisor, professor Srinivasan Keshav of the Cheriton
School of Computer Science, and Lukasz Golab, professor of Management
Science, collaborated with an unnamed EV-charging service provider who
works with property owners to install EV supply equipment that is used
by EV owners for a fee.
The revenue stream from these charging stations is then shared
between the charging service provider and each property owner. The EV
supply equipment is operated by the charging service provider, so the
property owners must trust the provider to compensate them fairly for
the electricity used.
From the case study, the researchers deduced that to incorporate
blockchain technology into an energy system, the involved parties must
first establish trust between themselves. Second, the parties concerned
should design a minimal blockchain system including smart contracts that
resolves the trust issues identified in the first step. Finally, with
the trust-mitigating blockchain in place, the rest of the system can be
migrated iteratively over time. This allows the business model to
eventually grow from a legacy/blockchain hybrid into a truly
decentralized solution, the researchers said.
According to Gorenflo, “In the end, we could even have a system where
there is machine-to-machine communication rather than
people-to-machine. If an autonomous vehicle needs power, it could detect
that and drive to the nearest charging station and communicate on a
platform with that charging station for the power.”
While blockchain implementations in India especially have centred
mostly around the banking, financial and insurance services sector
(BFSI), Jio recently announced it will install one of the largest global blockchain networks in India, comprising “tens of thousands of nodes operational on day one”, over the next 12 months.
That said, integration of blockchain technology into energy trading is now being touted as a promising area of research, and many studies have made efforts in this regard.
Switzerland-based The Share&Charge Foundation, for instance, is
building a decentralized blockchain system for EV charging, to support
payment and contracts. It uses the Open Charge Point Interface protocol
(OCPI) protocol for the peer-to-peer (P2P) connections between service
providers and charge point operators. According to Share&Charge, the
combination of OCPI with blockchain technology can result in secured
contract and connections between parties and improved payment and
settlement.
During the ‘Global Blockchain Congress–Consensus 2018’, organised by
the Department of Information Technology and Electronics, Government of
West Bengal in December 2018, researchers from New-Delhi based The
Energy and Resources Institute (Teri) made a presentation on the
‘Application of Blockchain in Modern Day Power Systems: Trendsetting a
New Paradigm’. Teri’s proposal, made by Alekhya Datta, Fellow, and
Shashank Vyas, Associate Fellow, covered use cases for EVs, distributed
battery storage, grid-connected microgrids, and rooftop solar PV project
financing using blockchain.
As an example, the Teri researchers pointed out that privately-owned
EV charging stations could be used to charge some vehicles passing near
the station and the transaction of bids of charging station owners,
power/energy flow, billing and real-time settlement of payments could be
managed over a blockchain.
Similarly, IIT-Kanpur researchers have proposed that since current billing systems
lack transparency, enabling the service provider to overcharge the
customer, blockchain could be used to develop a “verifiable billing”
system.
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 12:10 PM on Wednesday, August 14th, 2019
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FIFA eWorld Cup 2019 Grand Final generates record viewership
Online viewership increased by 60 per cent from 29m views in 2018 to 47m views in 2019
FIFA eWorld Cup™ Grand Final match carried by 21 broadcasters in more than 75 territories
More than 140m views across EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19 Global Series season since October 2018
FIFA and Electronic Arts Inc. announced today that the FIFA eWorld
Cup™ 2019 experienced another increase in total viewership and achieved
new record figures, generating more than 47 million views across online
platforms during the three-day event.
After impressive numbers throughout the season, FIFA eWorld Cup™ 2019
views increased 60 per cent compared to last year, becoming the most
viewed event of the EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19 Global Series.
The action was streamed in six languages for the first time – Arabic,
Chinese, English, German, Portuguese and Spanish – and was broadcast to
more than 75 territories around the world. Additionally, the EA SPORTS™
FIFA 19 Global Series generated more than 140 million total views
across the 2018/2019 season since kicking off in October 2018.
At the FIFA eWorld Cup™ 2019, the world’s best 32 EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19
players competed to be named champion. Mohammed ‘MoAuba’ Harkous from
Germany was ultimately crowned FIFA eWorld Cup™ Champion 2019, winning
the grand prize of USD 250,000 and an exclusive invitation to The Best FIFA Football Awards™, which take place in Milan on 23 September.
The pinnacle of the EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19 Global Series enjoyed a
fitting climax, with an enthusiastic crowd watching on from The O2,
London’s revered riverside arena, which created a one-of-a-kind
atmosphere in one of the most iconic music and entertainment venues in
the world.
After an expanded calendar which included 17 worldwide league
partners, new events such as the FIFA eNations Cup™ and the eChampions
League, as well as new events all over the globe, the FIFA eWorld Cup™
2019 crowned the world’s best EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19 player.
Speaking about the event, Luis Vicente, Chief Digital Transformation
and Innovation Officer at FIFA said: “The FIFA eWorld Cup™ 2019
showcased once more the growing interest in competitive FIFA and the
huge potential for both viewership and on-site live audiences.
Surpassing 100 million views across the season is another record
milestone for us and our partner EA SPORTS™. With the newly introduced
event structure and rankings this season, the competition level at the
FIFA eWorld Cup™ was the most competitive we’ve ever seen.â€
Vicente added: “With a 60 percent year-on-year increase in
viewership, the new elements added to the FIFA eWorld Cup™ 2019 like the
on-site production in six languages and live music acts complemented
another record-breaking event, resulting in a unique and exciting live
experience for fans at The O2 in London, as well as an enhanced
livestream experience for viewers on FIFA’s digital channels.â€
Reflecting on the FIFA eWorld Cup™ 2019 and the EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19
Global Series, Todd Sitrin, SVP and GM of the EA Competitive Gaming
Division said: “Competitive FIFA viewership growth has skyrocketed. This
growth was fuelled by an expanded EA SPORTS™ FIFA 19 Global Series
which now includes millions of competitors, 17 football league partners
hosting top-flight leagues, and dozens of licensed events being executed
throughout the year. We’re very happy with the results and the fact
that the eSports industry has recognized this franchise as a tier one
eSport.â€
Posted by AGORACOM-JC
at 10:31 AM on Wednesday, August 14th, 2019
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Company plans to bridge the prevailing gap in the education and job
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The art of new-age learning: A dynamic phenomenon
The e-learning market, valued at over USD 0.25 billion in 2016 is expected to grow to almost USD 1.96 billion by the end of 2021. But this begs the question, why is e-learning on the rise?
E learning, digital education, advantages of e learning, digital learning
It was always going to happen. Art of learning, as we have seen has
always been a dynamic phenomenon. What started as a fiefdom of few in
the age of gurukuls became a fraternity of educators and educated at the
advent of the 21st century.
But what has remained constant is the movement towards a
system that grants more autonomy to the learners, more avenues and tools
to educators and an overall impetus to the knowledge economy. The rise
of e-learning should be viewed in that neon light.
Over the years, numerous articles, blogs, and testimonials have been
written eulogizing, admonishing or elucidating the e-learning fad. All
of them capture one or the other facet of this emerging avenue. But
never have they been so (ir) relevant than now. India, at the moment, is
going through; perhaps its biggest development phase in the education
sector, particularly the one which deals the way knowledge is
disseminated and consumed. Byju, Toppr, Extraclass, you name it.
The probability will be that there are millions who have
heard their name or have used it once. The e-learning market, valued at
over USD 0.25 billion in 2016 is expected to grow to almost USD 1.96
billion by the end of 2021. But this begs the question, why is
e-learning on the rise?
Why is e-learning on the rise?
There are certain benefits to being on an e-learning platform. From
some obvious ones like the flexibility to learn anytime and anywhere to
personalized learning level matching your learning curve, the new way of
teaching offers something that was never possible before.
E-learning platforms offer you with not just a plethora of
disciplines to choose from but also come hard packed with methods that
are easy to grasp and easier to understand.
The application of audio-visual tools, fun animations and
colorful subject material makes it much easier for both the students and
tutors to understand and convey the concepts the books so desperately
try to achieve.
The dearth of physical infrastructure, a reality in many government
run schools, is something that can be easily overcome by adopting
neo-learning tools. All that one need is a working internet connection,
if the course is online or enough electricity hours to charge the
tablets that come in hand. And these are far cheaper to provide than the
usual infrastructures needed to run a school.
Major advantages
Another major advantage that these platforms offer, particularly
extraclass.com is the motivation to learn. It might sound far-fetched
but one of the primary reasons students hate schools or even colleges is
due to lack of motivation to sit in the class the whole day and still
learn nothing by the end of it. The problem is not with teachers, though
they too could use a bit of brushing, but in the mode of education. Not
everyone is blessed with a capability to sit out 8 hours at a stretch.
And faculties, burdened by their already heavy course structure have
little proclivity to make any changes or spare a word or two of
motivation to the students, since there’s syllabus to be completed,
assignments to be checked and administrative work to be done. What we
instead do is assign every child a mentor, a sort of guiding person who
helps them out not just with their course module but also with helping
them chalk out their career opportunities.
Main focus of EdTech startups
But behind this rosy picture lies a disconcerting reality, one which
still needs a lot of work to get affixed. While it is no surprise that
most of the EdTech startups begin by focusing mostly on Tier I and Tier
II cities, the trend is beginning to change. extraclass.com, for
instance, has made it an objective to start from the grassroots and then
make its way upward.
While it’s true that part of it is largely shaped by
relative saturation of the sector in the select cities, the fact remains
that focus on rural areas makes more sense, economically. With
competitive pricing, localized user interface and relevant product
placements, companies can tap into areas that have largely remained
untouched.
The size and demand of the education sector in the country is too
large to be manageable by government or few private players alone. The
time has come to engage players that have solutions that are more in
line with the changing trend of education. And that doesn’t demand
complete replacement of school systems with e-learning.
Both are needed. There is enough space to co-exist. A child is the
greatest asset of a nation and all of us have a role to play in shaping
him/her for the future of their nation, for their society and for
themselves.