Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-09-17 14:56:44| Fast Company

Japan’s exports to the United States plummeted 13.8% in August compared to the same month the previous year, marking the fifth straight month of declines, as auto exports were hit by President Donald Trump’s tariffs.The Finance Ministry data released Wednesday showed the rate of the drop in exports to the U.S. compared to the previous year worsened from a 10.1% slip in July.U.S. tariffs on Japanese automobiles and auto parts decreased from 27.5%, the amount Trump initially levied, to 15% this week, but that’s still higher than the original 2.5%.Wednesday’s data reflect the month of August, when the tariffs were higher. Japan’s overall exports were little changed, slipping 0.1%, as exports grew to Europe and the Middle East.The provisional data for August showed Japan’s imports from the world fell 5.2% from a year ago. Imports from China grew 2.1%, while exports to China fell 0.5%. Imports from the U.S. grew 11.6%.Exports to the world grew in food, gaining 18%, as well as in ships, growing by nearly 25%. Imports grew in computers, adding nearly 35% on-year, while aircraft rose 21%. Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama Yuri Kageyama, AP Business Writer


Category: E-Commerce

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-09-17 14:45:00| Fast Company

At a recent Apple event, the tech giant unveiled that Airpods will now be able to offer live translation abilities, powered by AI. Shares of Duolingo, the language-learning company, dropped nearly 3% that afternoon in response. (Google also added a similar feature to its Google Translate app in August.)  But Luis von Ahn, Duolingo’s cofounder and CEO, isnt really worried that real-time translation will be a threat to his business. For one, real-time translation isnt a totally new technology, he says. About 10 years ago, Google did their event, Google IO, and demoed live translation . . . Nine years ago, they did an event again, and what they demoed was live translation. Eight years ago, they did an event, and demoed live translation, von Ahn said on Tuesday, speaking at the Fast Company Innovation Festival in New York. [Photo: Jonah Rosenberg for Fast Company] These announcements have been happening since Duolingo has been a public company, and its stock will dip, he said, and then bounce back.  Language learning means learning it yourself Von Ahn also doesnt think live translation is appealing to Duolingo users. The app’s users generally fall into two big buckets, he noted, the first being the those who are learning English. They actually want to learn English, he said. Phone translation is just not going to do it for them. The other big bucket are people who use Duolingo to learn a language as a hobby. Just like chess, von Ahn said. (Duolingo added chess to its lesson lineup earlier this year). And computers have been better at playing chess than humans since 1997. People are still learning chess.  Its not that von Ahn is against AI. Duolingo has been leaning into the tech, too. In a staff memo von Ahn wrote back in May, he detailed how the company would become AI-first. That memo sent off a wave of backlash, as people took it to mean that the company would be replacing its human employees with artificial intelligence.  Von Ahn called that misinformation. We have not laid off a single full-time employee, now or in the history of the company, he said. (And Duolingo has actually been hiring since that announcement.) But employees are using AI to do more work.  ‘Four or five times as much content’ To teach a language through its app, Duolingo offers users lots of different course contentsentences to translate, short stories to read, cartoons to watch. That’s all always been created with a combination of human work and automation. As time has passed, more and more has been automated, von Ahn said. So now, with the same number of people, we can make four or five times as much content in the same amount of time. The addition of chess is one example. Two Duolingo employees started that project, and neither were engineersor knew how to play chess. Instead, the designer and project manager duo spent six months using AI to “vibecode.” Once the interactions reached a certain level, they added engineers to the team.  The whole thing was done from scratch to launch in nine months by a team that was at first just two people, and by the time they launched, it was only six, von Ahn said. And now . . . theres millions and millions of users.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-09-17 14:10:00| Fast Company

The José Andrés Group (JAG) officially announced on Wednesday its partnership with Copia, a technology platform that helps combat food insecurity and reduce food waste by distributing excess prepared foods to local nonprofits. The global restaurant group, founded by celebrity chef and restauranteur José Andrés, is the first Michelin-starred group to partner with Copia. The move aligns with the restaurant collectives mission to change the world through the power of food. What does Copia do? Copia simplifies the logistics behind the surplus food donation process. The tech platform enables businesses such as restaurants, corporate dining brands, and hospitality companies, to easily request pickups of excess prepared food. Partners are matched with local nonprofits to ensure the safe delivery of food donations.  Courtesy of Copia Food waste has long been a problem. According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, an international environmental advocacy group, up to 40% of the U.S. food supply is wasted. That’s enough food to fill the 90,000-seat Rose Bowl Stadium every day. Meanwhile, data from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) shows that more than 47 million Americans live in food-insecure households. Nearly 4,000 pounds of food waste have already been donated The partnership between JAG and Copia has already proven to be successful. Restaurants at three locationsthe Ritz-Carlton South Beach in Florida, the Ritz-Carlton in New York’s NoMad neighborhood, and Mercado Little Spain in New York’s Hudson Yardshave been using Copia to distribute excess food to those in need.  Nearly 4,000 pounds of food have been redirected since the José Andrés Group started using Copia’s platform. This has resulted in the distribution of 3,292 meals, the prevention of 12,165 pounds of CO2e emissions, and the conservation of more than 900,000 gallons of water, the companies said. Additional JAG restaurants in Washington, D.C., will soon begin redistributing excess food through Copia.  “Restaurants have the power to do more than feed peoplethey can fight hunger, fight waste, and fight climate change,” Sam Bakhshandehpour, CEO of JAG, said in a statement. “Partnering with Copia lets us turn that power into action.”  On Wednesday, Bakhshandehpour will lead a discussion at The Bazaar by José André in NoMad as part of the Fast Company Innovation Festival. The discussion will explore how the restaurant group continues to innovate on its mission and how other restaurant groups and food businesses can make a difference, such as creating menus that minimize food waste and partnering with services like Copia.  Paige Lowe, vice president of customer success at Copia, will also join the event. 


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

17.09A new contender just rattled the obesity drug market
17.09Insurers move to calm fears over vaccine access
17.09Co-founder Jerry Greenfield is leaving Ben & Jerrys after 47 years over political dispute
17.09Why so many people still feel stuck in the COVID pause
17.09AIs boost to global trade set to surge by 2040, but the WTO has a warning
17.09Whitney Houston is going on tour 13 years after her death, thanks to AI
17.09The 5 best states for retirement. No. 1 will surprise you
17.09Etsy witches are having a moment
E-Commerce »

All news

17.09Tomorrow's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
17.09Bull Radar
17.09Bear Radar
17.09What Made the $MIR Trade Great
17.09Mid-Day Market Internals
17.09A new contender just rattled the obesity drug market
17.09Insurers move to calm fears over vaccine access
17.09Co-founder Jerry Greenfield is leaving Ben & Jerrys after 47 years over political dispute
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .