BusinessMirror
THREETIME ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDEE 2006, 2010, 2012
U.N. MEDIA AWARD 2008
A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18, 2014 Vol. 102015 No. 40Vol. 10 No. 286 Wednesday, July 22,
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COMPETITION ACT, NEW CABOTAGE LAW BOOST PHL’S A.E.C. PREPAREDNESS
P-Noy signs key economic laws
INSIDE
MICROSOFT OFFICE Our children remember
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EAR Lord, knowing that our children remember all the material things we are giving them, like toys, gadgets for education, homes built for them, travel opportunities, money properly budgeted and many more is very comforting. Our children remember much more the time we spend with them, feelings that show we cherish them, concern that they are always safe and unending prayers that they become good children of God. May our children remember that we treasure them until time permits with God’s grace and love. Amen. RICHARD L. EVANS, YETTA L. CRUZ AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
THIS product image provided by Microsoft shows Microsoft Word for Mac, part of the new Microsoft Office 2016 Mac suite. MICROSOFT
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RESIDENT Aquino on Tuesday signed into law the Philippine Competition Act and the Foreign Ships Co-Loading Act—as landmark measures that would further boost trade and fair competition in the country.
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BusinessMirror
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
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RECEIVING the awards for PLDT Home and Smart are (from left) PLDT/Smart Executive Vice President and Consumer Business Group Head Ariel P. Fermin, Smart Department Head for Brand Equity Management Carlo Endaya, PLDT Vice President and Head of Home SSC and Retention Management Paolo Lopez, and PLDT Vice President and Home Marketing Head Gary Dujali.
PLDT HOME AND SMART WIN IN FIRST-EVER SHARE OF VOICE AWARDS
Microsoft Office in a world of multiple devices B A J The Associated Press
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EW YORK—Microsoft’s new Office apps do a good job of helping us navigate a world in which we frequently switch from one device to another—from a Mac to a Windows PC, with a smartphone or tablet along the way. The company released Microsoft Office 2016 for Mac on Thursday and new apps for Android phones two weeks ago. New ones for Windows phones and tablets are coming this summer and for Windows PCs this fall. They join apps for iPads, iPhones and Android tablets. An Office 365 subscription gets you all this—$70 for a single Mac or Windows PC at a time, or $100 for five. Mobile apps are free, though a subscription unlocks advance features that most people won’t need. Mac and Windows versions are sold the traditional way, too, with a one-time payment, though you can’t use Office on another PC without buying it again. Here’s a look at what’s available: OFFICE FOR MAC IT took five years, but the Mac version of Office no longer feels second-class. The new Office 2016 for Mac is very similar to the existing Windows version, which will get its own Office 2016 update this fall. Tabs such as “Home,” “Insert” and “Design” are in the same order in both versions, unlike Office 2011 for Mac. The Mac gets various keyboard shortcuts I’m used to on Windows. No longer do I have to navigate menus to get to things I use often. New to Office 2016 is a quick-access sharing button to collaborate more easily. If you keep files on Microsoft’s OneDrive storage service, changes made by others will sync with your copy. No more looking for the latest version of a file in e-mail. Again reflecting the multidevice nature of our lives, the “Recent” button will get you the files you recently opened, regardless of the device (at least if you use OneDrive). And with one click in Word, you can jump to where you left off on the previous device. For spreadsheets, the new version brings a “Recommended Charts” feature from Windows. You’re shown previews of charts that make the most sense for a given data set. For presentations, the Mac gets advanced transitions and other animations previously restricted to Windows. Those with an Office 365 subscription can get the
THE country’s leading residential digital services provider PLDT Home, and wireless leader Smart Communications topped industry awards in two different categories at the first-ever Share of Voice Awards (Sova) presented by digital agency AllFamous Digital. PLDT Home won the Best in Customer Service award, while Smart bagged the Most Positively Talked About plum, both for the telecommunications industry. According to AllFamous Digital’s web site, Sova is the “first annual industry awards show of its kind that’s based on what millions of netizens in the Philippines say about brands on social media and various online channels.” Share of Voice is an industry-accepted social-media metric that measures a brand or a company’s online presence through netizen’s posts and conversations. The recognition was based on a quantifiable measure of public online sentiment, using the Salesforce Radian 6 listening and social analytics tool. Over a 12-month period, Radian 6 culled brand mentions on social media and other online channels like blogs, news and forums. It then computed the percentage of positive mentions versus the total number of mentions received by each brand across 11 industries. “This recognition is meaningful to us because it was given not by a selected group of people but by millions of Filipino netizens who are happy with our service. It is very heartwarming to know that a lot of netizens have taken time to say positive things about PLDT Home and Smart,” PLDT/Smart Executive Vice President and Group Consumer Business Head Ariel P. Fermin said.
Mac Office starting Thursday at http://office.microsoft. com. Microsoft will sell Office for a one-time payment starting in September. Prices haven’t been announced; previous versions started at $140 for a base package that doesn’t include Outlook. Word for writing, Excel for spreadsheets, PowerPoint for presentations, Outlook for e-mail and OneNote for organization are available for the Mac and all other devices, while less-used apps such as Publisher and Access are for Windows desktops and laptops only. OFFICE FOR WINDOWS THERE will be two versions of Office for Windows— PC and mobile. You can run both at once, but I don’t recommend it. Sometimes a document will open in one version when I really want the other. Choose one and stick with it. ■ Office 2013, to be replaced by Office 2016 this fall, is designed for desktops and laptops. While it can also run on tablets, it is better for devices with keyboards and mouse controls. ■ Mobile versions are designed for tablets and optimized for touchscreens. But they can also run on desktops and laptops—at least those that get Windows 10 when the free update comes out July 29. (Windows 10 phones will also get new mobile apps.) OFFICE ON MOBILE MOBILE apps are complementary rather than substitutes for the PC versions. They have limits, regardless of whether you use Windows, Android or Apple’s iOS. For instance, you can open only one document at a time, making cutting and pasting between documents cumbersome. They aren’t meant for writing novels, at least without a physical keyboard accessory. Phones have even fewer features than tablets. But mobile is great for proofreading and editing existing documents. You can add comments and sync changes across devices through OneDrive. I’ve turned to the tablet on trains and planes, even when a laptop is in my backpack. Documents preserve fonts, formatting and page breaks from device to device. Text is tiny when fitting a full page on a phone’s screen, but there’s a “Reflow” button to temporarily reformat text for the smaller display. Some devices require manual saving, and locations change for tasks such as search and Excel text wrap. The iPad app is the most complete, though the upcoming one for Windows tablets comes close. ■
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GRATEFUL. HUMBLED. THANKFUL. Sports
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| WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 2015 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao
GRATEFUL. HUMBLED. THANKFUL. Zach Johnson joins Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Sam Snead, Seve Ballesteros and Nick Faldo as the only players to win the Masters and a British Open on the Old Course. B S DM USA Today
AINT Andrews, Scotland—Zach Johnson’s not too big, not too strong, not the most talented guy in the room. But he has plenty of grit and guts and he works and he works, on the golf course and in the gym. He’s also one of the best putters on the planet. Not too bad with a wedge in his hands, either. And the man who says he’s just an ordinary guy out of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, now has a Claret Jug to go with a green jacket. Johnson made birdie from 28 feet on the 72nd hole to polish off a 66 on the Old Course in the Auld Grey Toun on Monday and earn a spot in a three-man, four-hole playoff in the oldest championship in golf. He then promptly birdied the first two holes—both from 15 feet—and defeated Marc Leishman and Louis Oosthuizen to win the 144th British Open. Johnson, who began the championship with a sterling 6-under-par 66 in the worst conditions on Thursday, finished regulation at 15 under. He stood off the 18th green as Oosthuizen, who won the Open here in 2010, struck a 10-footer for birdie that would have forced sudden death. The putt lipped out. Thus Johnson, who won the Masters in 2007 in frigid cold on a rock-hard Augusta National, joins Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Sam Snead, Seve Ballesteros and Nick Faldo as the only players to win the Masters and a British Open on the Old Course. That’s some pretty good company, indeed. “I’m grateful, I’m humbled, I’m thankful,” said Johnson, who won his 12th Professional Golfers’ Association Tour title and moved to No. 12 in the world. “I’m honored. This is the birthplace of the game, and that jug means so much in sports, specifically this tournament and golf.” It was a week of patience, perseverance, trust and bravery, as this Open was forced to go to a Monday finish for only the second time since 1860 due to torrential rains and gale-forced winds. But Johnson was the last man standing before the imposing Royal & Ancient Golf Club of Saint Andrews that looms over the first tee, surviving some of the biggest names and games in golf, including Jordan Spieth, Jason Day, Adam Scott, Sergio Garcia and Justin Rose. Johnson is a man of faith who cited Scripture written in his yardage book all-week-long. He’s a devoted husband and father of three (Will is 8; Wyatt, 5; and Abby Jane, 2). He likes to say he lives a simple life in Saint Simons Island, Georgia, where he goes to high-school football games on Friday nights and soccer games on Saturday. He is who he is and doesn’t try to be anything he’s not—on and off the course.
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AINT Andrews, Scotland—Not surprisingly, Texas tough Jordan Spieth went down fighting in his march toward history on an ancient links hard by the North Sea. Surprisingly, however, it was his putter that did in his bid for history. The world’s No. 2-ranked player and winner of the first two majors of 2015 needed four whacks with the shortest and best club in his bag on the eighth hole of the hallowed Old Course in Monday’s final round of the 144th edition of the British Open to make a double-bogey 5. The blemish on the scorecard proved to be too much to
“I feel like God gave me the ability to play a game. I try to take it very seriously. I realize it’s just a game,” said Johnson, who made sure to thank his team around him, including his wife, Kim, and trusted sidekick caddie Damon Green. “...But this isn’t going to define me or my career, at least, I hope it doesn’t. It’s not my legacy. Granted, as a professional athlete and as a golfer I’m going to relish this. I’m going to savor this. I’m humbled by this. But my legacy should be my kids, my family.” He’s 39 with a bald spot but said as he’s aged he’s come to enjoy practicing more and working out in the gym, “even if it doesn’t look like it.” This week on the ancient Old Course softened by weeks of rain, Johnson was tested even more as the longest hitters had a huge advantage. At almost 5-11 and “be generous, I’m 165,” Johnson knows he can’t bang with the big boys on Tour. While tempted to take more aggressive—and dangerous—lines with his tee shots, he stuck to his strengths: patience, accuracy off the tee, a superb wedge game and an envied putter. He made eight birdies in the last round— most set up by his wedges—and made huge pars on the inward nine that muscles up as it goes back toward town and into the wind. He remained true to his talents and stuck to his game plan. Sports psychologist Moe Pickens works with Johnson and said one of his main strengths is his mind game. Pickens said the last time he saw Johnson make a mental mistake on the golf course was in the 2007 US Open at Oakmont, where he used 3-wood far too often instead of driver and ended up further back in the rough as a result. In other words, he played too safe, instead of relying on his straight driving abilities. Pickens also said Johnson’s temperament is key. “The more you play these majors, the better you get,” Pickens said. “He doesn’t get too high on the golf course. And he doesn’t get too low.” And Johnson certainly won’t get a big head. He knows what he did on a magical Monday in the rain, in the winds, on a place they call the Old Course. But come Tuesday, he’s back to being Zach Johnson. “I’m just a guy from Iowa,” he said, “who lives in southeast Georgia who has a green jacket and something that not most guys don’t have to drink out of right now.”
overcome, and Spieth fell one shot short of a playoff and one major shy of joining Ben Hogan as the only players to win the Masters, US Open and British Open in the same year. “Although we came in wanting to be two shots better than what we finished, with everything that went on this week and the momentum we came in with it, yeah, I’m very pleased with the way we battled,” said Spieth, who won the John Deere Classic for his fourth Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Tour title of the year before taking the red-eye to Scotland. “Today was a really tough day. Just made a mental mistake on No. 8, and it seemed to have cost me as well on 18, just
ZACH JOHNSON takes his place in history with Masters and British Open wins. AP
JORDAN SPIETH says he won’t let British Open, end of Grand Slam haunt him. AP
‘Putter giveth, and putter taketh away’ not giving myself a chance.... I just wish I had given myself a little better opportunity.” With history hovering above him all week, Spieth, despite needing 37 putts in the second round, came to the eighth tee just two shots shy of the leader. But in strong winds and rain coming down sideways, he pushed his tee shot 100 feet to the right, then putted the ball 15 feet off the green. He compounded the error by taking three more to go in for a 5. He came right back with a birdie No. 9, and another on No. 10. He nearly chipped in for birdie on the 13, the ball falling a bit before bouncing off the flagstick and out of the hole. Then he holed a monster putt from 50 feet on
16 to get into a share of the lead. But on the toughest hole on the course— the par-four 17th known as the Road Hole— Spieth missed a par putt from 7 feet to fall back. Needing a birdie on the last, he hit a poor drive and then spun his approach off the green into the Valley of Sin. His bid for the playoff fell inches shy. The putter giveth, and the putter taketh away. “We stepped on that tee box, and you’d like to maybe have a downwind hole where it doesn’t really make that much of a difference, but when you look up from the ball and you’re getting pelted in the face, it’s a hard shot, and I just tried to sling one in there and I left
it 40 yards from the pin on the green there, and it’s just a no-brainer. If you make bogey, you’re still in it. If you make double-bogey, it’s a very difficult climb, and there’s absolutely no reason to hit that putt off the green,” Spieth said. “ ...My speed control was really what cost me this week, the five three-putts the second round, and then just my speed control in general wasn’t great.” Spieth said he won’t let coming so close haunt him as he heads to a two-week break. Instead, he’ll relax, practice and get ready to make history in a different way in the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. Instead of going for the Grand
Slam, he’ll try and join Hogan and Tiger Woods as the only players in the modern era to win three majors in a season. Hogan won three in 1953; Woods did it in 2000. “That would be the next goal as far as the history goes,” he said. “...I really played a solid round of golf. I didn’t miss many chances, other than No. 8. Obviously, 17 and 18 could have been a little different, but I struck the ball phenomenally well, I drove the ball as well as I’ve driven it this entire year, including the other majors and every other tournament. “...I won’t beat myself up too much. It was a great week.” USA Today
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To be known as Republic Act (RA) 10667, the Competition Act aims to strengthen existing antitrust regulations, creating what its authors prescribed as “a competition policy that outlaws and penalizes anticompetitive agreements, abuse of dominant position, and anticompetitive mergers and acquisitions.” On the other hand, RA 10668, or the Foreign Ships Co-Loading Act, embodies amendments to the cabotage law, allowing
DO YOU STILL SHOP IN A‘PALENGKE’? 7 OF 10 PINOYS DON’T B M M M L Special to the BM
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INDO REYES was forced to close his stall in the Imus Public Market, as his regular customers no longer buy from him. Reyes said all his customers shop in nearby supermarkets, which have sprouted all over Cavite. Reyes opened his stall in the Imus Public Market in 2001 and business was good, at least until 2009. When supermarkets started dotting the province, Reyes saw his sales plummet. Efforts to win back his regular customers, he said, were all in vain. In just a few years, five supermarkets were built near the public market. Because they can afford to offer more goods, even Reyes was forced to instruct customers to head to the supermarkets for some grocery items that he does not offer.
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Megaworld allots ₧20B for 12 new office bldgs B VG C
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EGAWORLD Corp. on Tuesday said it will spend some P20 billion to build a dozen new office buildings in Bonifacio Global City in Taguig. Megaworld said the amount will be spent in a span of three years, consistent with its plan to more than double its current 300,000 -square-meter officespace inventory in the Fort Bonifacio area alone by 2018. “We remain upbeat in maintaining our leadership as the biggest developer and lessor of office spaces in the country. By 2018 ou r tot a l of f ice space inventory in Fort Bonifacio alone will reach around 650,000 sq m, still making us
PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 45.2590
the leading office developer in this booming district,” said Jericho Go, the company’s senior vice president. About four office towers are cur rent ly being bu i lt in Up town Bonifacio, the company’s 15.4-hectare integrated township in the northern part of the former military camp. These are the 15-story Uptown Tower 1 at 30,000 sq m; the 15-story Uptown Tower 2, 30,000 sq m; the 20-story Uptown Tower 3, 40,000 sq m; and the 25-story Alliance Global Tower, 50,000 sq m, which will serve as corporate headquarters of the companies under Alliance Global Group Inc., the holding firm of businesses owned by Andrew L. Tan. C A
MEGAWORLD Senior Vice President Jericho P. Go shows to the media the ongoing construction of its three towers, which will soon be open for office spaces. The company announced the opening of 12 new office buildings in three of its four townships in Bonifacio Global City in the next three years during a news conference held in Taguig City. Megaworld is spending P20 billion to construct the towers. ALYSA SALEN
■ JAPAN 0.3642 ■ UK 70.4547 ■ HK 5.8394 ■ CHINA 7.2884 ■ SINGAPORE 33.0165 ■ AUSTRALIA 33.4138 ■ EU 49.0019 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.0681 Source: BSP (21 July 2015)