Instant Alert: Blake Griffin is going to stay with the Clippers

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Blake Griffin is going to stay with the Clippers

by Tim Reynolds on Jun 30, 2017, 10:24 PM

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A person with knowledge of the situation says Blake Griffin has agreed to a five-year deal worth approximately $175 million to remain with the Los Angeles Clippers.

Griffin and the Clippers agreed Friday night on a new deal, one that will be signed when the league's moratorium on offseason moves ends on July 6. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the deal has not been signed.

Griffin opted out last week from the final year of his contract, one that would have paid him $21.4 million.

Griffin has spent his entire career with the Clippers, averaging 21.5 points and 9.4 rebounds on 52 percent shooting in seven seasons. He's staying with a Clippers team that lost Chris Paul to Houston this week.

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More AP NBA: www.apnews.com/tag/NBAbasketbal

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Instant Alert: The world's largest investor just upped the intensity of a brutal Wall Street battle

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The world's largest investor just upped the intensity of a brutal Wall Street battle

by Trevor Hunnicutt on Jun 30, 2017, 11:35 PM

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc on Friday said it would move fifty of its exchange-traded funds from NYSE Arca to homes on rival trading exchanges in a move that points to more competition in the fast-growing industry.

The world's largest asset manager and issuer of ETFs will move 30 of its iShares-brand ETFs to CBOE Holdings Inc's Bats exchange and an additional 20 ETFs to Nasdaq Inc, the New York-based company said in a statement. BlackRock managed $1.4 trillion in ETFs on March 31.

Intercontinental Exchange Inc's NYSE Arca exchange is home to the lion's share of the more than 2,000 U.S.-listed ETFs, but competitors have been aggressively trying to win away issuers and traders. After the changes are made on Aug 1, iShares will still have 209 ETFs listed on NYSE Arca, the company said.

NYSE has faced scrutiny for technical glitches affecting ETFs, including a March issue that prevented some ETFs from completing an auction at the end of the day. 

In a statement, Samara Cohen, Americas Head of iShares Capital Markets at BlackRock, said "a thriving market for ETFs requires a robust, resilient ecosystem, with multiple participants committed to continuous innovation and improving the client experience."

A NYSE spokeswoman declined to comment.

ETFs are absorbing an increasing share of market activity, and listing them is valuable to exchanges hoping to win more trading volume and also sell data. More value is exchanged each day in the top ETFs like the SPDR S&P 500 ETF and iShares Russell 2000 ETF than in most stocks.

SEE ALSO: BlackRock gets into European 'robo advice' as it leads €30 million investment in Scalable Capital


 
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Instant Alert: Veteran umpire Joe West was hit in the head by a ball thrown from the stands

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Veteran umpire Joe West was hit in the head by a ball thrown from the stands

by Associated Press and Cork Gaines on Jun 30, 2017, 10:57 PM

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MILWAUKEE (AP) — A ball apparently thrown from the stands at Miller Park struck first-base umpire Joe West directly in the back of the head, leading to a seven-minute delay during the Miami-Milwaukee game as security personnel tried to locate the culprit.

West was positioned behind the bag with one out and Milwaukee's Travis Shaw on first base in the fourth inning Friday. West remained on his feet after the ball struck him and remained at his post when play resumed.

Here is video of the moment, via Fox Sports Florida:

Marlins pitcher Brad Ziegler, who is on the disabled list with a back strain, tweeted: "I hope they file assault charges for whoever just hit Joe West with the baseball. Absolutely ridiculous."

The 64-year-old West, nicknamed "Cowboy" Joe, worked his 5,000th career regular-season game last week. He's the third umpire to work at least 5,000 games, joining Hall of Famer Bill Klem (5,375) and Bruce Froemming (5,163).

West made his major league debut as a 23-year-old on Sept. 14, 1976. He joined the National League staff full time in 1978. His 40 seasons umpiring in the majors are the most by any umpire.

West also has also worked two All-Star Games, 123 postseason games and six World Series.


 
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Instant Alert: Dropbox is reportedly looking for IPO underwriters

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Dropbox is reportedly looking for IPO underwriters

by Liana B. Baker and Lauren Hirsch on Jun 30, 2017, 9:58 PM

Drew Houston, Founder, DropboxData-sharing business Dropbox Inc is seeking to hire underwriters for an initial public offering that could come later this year, which would make it the biggest U.S. technology company to go public since Snap Inc, people familiar with the matter said on Friday.

Dropbox will begin interviewing investment banks in the coming weeks, the sources said, asking not to be named because the deliberations are private.

Dropbox declined to comment.

Several big U.S. technology companies such as Uber Technologies Inc and Airbnb Inc have resisted going public in recent months, concerned that stock market investors, who focus more on profitability than do private investors, would assign lower valuations to them.

Snap, owner of the popular messaging app Snapchat, was forced to lower its IPO valuation expectations earlier this year amid investor concern over its unproven business model. Its shares have since lingered just above the IPO price, with investors troubled by widening losses and missed analyst estimates.

Still, for many private companies, there is increasing pressure to go pubic as investors look to cash out.

Proceeds from technology IPOs slumped to $6.7 billion in2015 from $34 billion in 2014, and shrunk further to $2.9 billion in 2016, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Dropbox's main competitor, Box Inc, was valued at roughly $1.67 billion in its IPO in 2015, less than the $2.4 billion it had been valued at in previous private fundraising rounds.

San Francisco-based Dropbox, which was founded in 2007 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduates Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowsi, counts Sequoia Capital, T. Rowe Price and Greylock Partners as investors.

Dropbox started as a free service for consumers to share and store photos, music and other large files. That business became commoditized though, as Alphabet Inc's Google, Microsoft Corp and Amazon.com Inc began offering storage for free.

It has since pivoted to focus on winning business clients, and Houston, the company's CEO, has said that Dropbox is on track to generate more than $1 billion in revenue this year.

The company has expanded its Dropbox Business that requires companies to pay a fee based on the number of employees who use it. The service in January began offering Smart Sync, which allows users to see and access all of their files, whether stored in the cloud or on a local hard drive, from their desktop.

(Additional reporting by Heather Somerville, Salvador Rodriguez and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Leslie Adler)

SEE ALSO: How Drew Houston turned a lost USB drive into a $10 billion business and learned a lot about life along the way


 
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Instant Alert: Pentagon approves a 6-month delay in transgender enlistments

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Pentagon approves a 6-month delay in transgender enlistments

by Lolita Baldor on Jun 30, 2017, 8:59 PM

U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis is seen at the Pentagon in Arlington, VA, U.S. April 13, 2017. REUTERS/Eric ThayerWASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is giving the military chiefs another six months before they begin allowing transgender individuals to enlist in the armed services.

Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White says Mattis made the decision Friday.

A Mattis memo obtained by The Associated Press says he wanted to give the services time to insure the change won’t affect the readiness and lethality of the force.

His decision endorses an agreement hammered out last week by the military service leaders. That plan rejected Army and Air Force requests for a two-year wait and reflected the broader worry that a longer delay would trigger criticism on Capitol Hill.

Transgender service members have been able to serve openly in the military since last year, but not allowed to enlist as new recruits.

SEE ALSO: Here's why Defense Secretary Jim Mattis hardly ever speaks to the press


 
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Instant Alert: Kentucky secretary of state: 'There's not enough bourbon here in Kentucky' to justify White House request for voter info

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Kentucky secretary of state: 'There's not enough bourbon here in Kentucky' to justify White House request for voter info

by Bryan Logan on Jun 30, 2017, 8:57 PM

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Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Grimes sounded off on the voter-fraud commission in charge of investigating a claim by President Donald Trump that millions of illegal ballots were cast in the 2016 election.

Grimes appeared on MSNBC Friday, after her office rejected the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity's request for sensitive data on individual registered voters.

The information, according to a letter the commission's vice-chair Kris Kobach sent to all 50 states on Wednesday, would be placed in a national public database.

"There's not enough bourbon here in Kentucky to make this request seem sensible," Grimes said.

The Kentucky secretary of state said the information requested is something "no American in their right mind would hand over, let alone hand over to President Trump — someone who likes to tweet 140 characters at a time."

"Not on my watch are we gonna be turning over something that's left to the states to run — elections are left to our states under the 10th Amendment — to the federal government."

Grimes' comments follow an overwhelming response from at least two dozen US states that have also rejected Kobach's request. She also questioned the security of the website to which states were asked to upload sensitive voter data.

Voter advocates have roundly torched the commission's activities, which they called politically motivated. Others have said that mass collection of the information could threaten voter privacy at a time when the US is still reeling from Russia's meddling in the 2016 election.

"We haven't even covered the entire sham reason this commission was created," Grimes said, "and that's to try to find evidence to support a lie the president continues to perpetuate."

Watch Grimes' remarks below:

SEE ALSO: 'A waste of taxpayer money': Trump's voter fraud commission is facing pushback from a dozen states


 
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Instant Alert: This one chart shows the iPhone's devastating effect on the consumer electronics market

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This one chart shows the iPhone's devastating effect on the consumer electronics market

by Caroline Cakebread on Jun 30, 2017, 8:03 PM

It's hard to imagine life without a smartphone, but it's only been 10 years since Steve Jobs unveiled the first iPhone and kicked off the smartphone boom. Before that, buying a GPS system for your car or a new camcorder to use on vacation was totally normal. 

But as time went on smartphones grew to include the same devices people once went to RadioShack for, and paying for and keeping track of cameras, iPods, and portable navigation systems became more of a hassle than a luxury. 

Companies like Garmin and Cannon struggled and then were forced to diversify their products into other markets not yet dominated by the smartphone. Data from the Consumer Technology Association charted for us by Statista shows the staggering decline in sales for various types of electronics after 2007, the first year of the iPhone.

As the survey shows, some consumer electronics (the camcorder in particular) have practically become obsolete, and it's almost impossible to imagine them making a comeback as smartphones become even more advanced. Chart of the day 6/30/17

SEE ALSO: How far Apple's business has rocketed since the iPhone first launched


 
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