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A broader look at today’s business Saturday 18,August 2014 Vol.19, 10 No. 40 Vol. 10 No. 314 Wednesday, 2015
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PLDT urges reversal of NTC’s Globe ruling M
P170B BICOL RAILWAY PROJECT AWAITS BIDDERS
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HE National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) should reverse its decision to allow the merger of Globe Telecom Inc. and Bayan Telecommunications Inc. (Bayantel), because the ruling is devoid of any legal basis. Likewise, the regulator should have required the two telecommunications companies to divest their excess frequencies for fair competition, the Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT) said in a filing dated August 7. In a 19-page motion for reconsideration, the multimedia conglomerate
INSIDE
APPLE WATCH Forgive us, oh Lord
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OR giving You too little time during the day. For being slow in recognizing the signs You give. For being inattentive to the prompting of the Holy Spirit. For praying mechanically and without conviction. For misleading others by our lies. For revealing the faults of others through gossips. For thinking of and speaking uncharitably to others. Forgive us, oh Lord, as we beg Your pardon. Amen. DAILY PRAYERS, VIRGIE SALAZAR AND LOUIE M. LACSON Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
Editor: Gerard S. Ramos • lifestylebusinessmirror@gmail.com
Life BusinessMirror
Why I’m no longer wearing my Apple Watch PHOTO: GARY REYES/ BAY AREA NEWS GROUP/TNS
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’VE stopped wearing my Apple Watch. After buying it the day Apple released it in April, I wore it faithfully every day for at least two months. I strapped it on every morning when I woke up and made sure to place it on its charger at the end of the day. But one evening this summer, I took it off and didn’t put it back on. I didn’t discard my flashy new Apple Watch out of disgust. I wasn’t trying to make a political or commercial statement by removing Silicon Valley’s trendy status symbol from my wrist. And I didn’t replace it with another watch or fitness band. I simply didn’t have a compelling reason to wear it. And it turns out I didn’t miss it. When I did try to resume the Watch habit while on vacation a couple of weeks ago, I found it somewhat useful for storing boarding passes while flying. But back on the ground, I quickly ceased wearing it because we spent a lot of time in the pool, and the Apple Watch isn’t waterproof. In fact, I’ve found it to be a limited device that doesn’t do anything particularly well. Heck, because the screen’s off by default, it’s not even as good as my old Swiss Army watch was at displaying the time. Despite all the hoopla around its release this spring, the Apple Watch seems much like other novelties that shine bright for a moment only to gather dust in the drawer. In particular, it reminds me of fitness bands like those from Fitbit. A survey released last year indicated half of people who had owned a fitness band at that point had already stopped using it and one-third did so within six months of getting it. According to the study, conducted by consulting firm Endeavor Partners, one of the primary reasons consumers stopped wearing the bands was because they provided them with “no material benefit.” That’s how I felt about Apple Watch. The main thing the device did for me was to send alerts and notifications, such as when one of my close friends had posted something on Facebook, when I had an appointment coming up, or when someone was calling. This was a mixed blessing at best. On the one hand, I was more likely to get those alerts than if I was just relying on my phone. On the other hand, most of the alerts I receive don’t require my immediate attention, and even when they do I don’t necessarily need to be alerted on two devices at the same time. If I’m waiting for a call, I often have my phone out; I don’t need to have it and the Watch ringing simultaneously. You can customize notifications in the Apple Watch app on the iPhone, but it’s often a binary choice. You can have it notify you for all your calendar reminders—or for none of them. You can have it ring whenever the phone does—or not at all. If you want the phone to send alerts at certain times, but not others, you have to change its settings manually; you can’t automate them. And some notifications are just annoying, because you can’t do anything with them on the Watch. It will
MILEY CYRUS RAILS AGAINST ‘HANNAH MONTANA’ FOR BODY IMAGE, ANXIETY ISSUES »D2
show when you get a notification on Facebook, for example. But if you want to actually see what your friend has posted, you’ll have to pull out your phone. The Watch’s shortcomings with notifications and even displaying the time wouldn’t matter as much if it had some compelling apps. Unfortunately, it doesn’t. Many of the apps I use most frequently on my iPhone—things like Facebook, Netflix and MapMyFitness—aren’t available for the Watch. And I didn’t find any great reason to use the apps that do exist. If I wanted to search Amazon for a book or other product, it was much easier, more satisfying and usually much faster to use my phone with its bigger screen, fast Internet connection and full keyboard. Same goes for Twitter or my e-mail. There just weren’t many situations where it was easier or more compelling to use the Watch. Even using the Watch to board my plane pointed to its limitations. It took far longer for me to call up my passes and scan them than my fellow passengers who simply presented paper printouts. Apple Watch may become a more useful product in the future once software updates allow developers to create more powerful and potentially compelling apps. Someday, a version of the Watch may have its own cellular radio, allowing it to access the Internet and take calls when users aren’t at home and don’t have their iPhones nearby.
■ Troy Wolverton is a technology columnist for the San Jose Mercury News. Reach him at twolverton@ mercurynews.com or follow him on Twitter @troywolv.
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
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All-out fun at home THERE are stars and there are volleyball superstars. Today PLDT Home unravels the faces behind ultra-fun Ultera Barkada by presenting its brand-new ambassadors who hail from the ranks of the country’s top volleyball celebrities, all superstars in their own right. Ultra-fast LTE brand PLDT Home Ultera (www.pldthome. com) takes all-out fun to another level with the launch of com its new brand ambassadors: the talented and fun-loving volleyball players Alyssa Valdez, Dindin and Jaja Santiago, Rachel Daquis, Ara Galang, Mika Reyes, John Vic de Guzman and Peter Torres. Each of these young athletecelebrities have been making waves in their field, with a fan base that multiplies by the day. “This is the power roster that represents what PLDT Home Ultera is all about,” PLDT VP and HOME Marketing Head Gary Dujali said. “Each of them has gone all-out in volleyball, rising to excellence through hard work and dedication. Now we’re showing the side of them that goes all out at home with family and friends. The Ultera lifestyle is about going all-out in anything you do, and we apply that mantra to our home-based Internet connection. When it comes to the Internet, some think that Wi-Fi hot spots and Internet cafés are as good as it gets. But PLDT Home Ultera offers ultra-fast LTE connection and affordable broadband to enable all-out fun at home so you don’t settle for anything less. “Our Ultera barkada family embodies this message perfectly,” Dujali added.
PLDT Home’s Marketing Head Gary Dujali with local volleyball superstars Alyssa Valdez (from left) and sisters Dindin and Jaja Santiago.
The Note 5 will cost $696 to $740 without a contract, depending on the carrier. The Edge Plus will cost about $75 more. The iPhone 6 Plus sells for about $750. T-Mobile is throwing in a year of Netflix with both phones, while Sprint is giving away a low-end Samsung tablet with a two-year contract. Samsung Electronics Co. also said its Samsung Pay mobile-payment service will launch in the US on September 28. Although there’s competition from Apple Pay and Google’s upcoming Android Pay, Samsung is hoping its payments system will catch on with the inclusion of a technology that mimics the old-school, magnetic signals from credit-card swipes. That allows it to work with a wider range of merchants, though it still won’t work everywhere cards are accepted. Samsung also teased an upcoming smartwatch, the Gear S2. It will have a round face rather than the rectangular design of Apple Watch and previous Samsung watches. AP
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Property BusinessMirror
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
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VISTA RESIDENCES ELEVATES THE QUALITY OF HOUSING IN QUEZON CITY WITH ITS VISTA FLATS
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ARNING itself the moniker “Quezon City’s University Belt (U-Belt),” Katipunan Avenue feeds into three of Metro Manila’s, and the Philippines’s, top learning institutions—Ateneo de Manila University, Miriam College, and the University of the Philippines.
The three universities currently serve about 98,000 students— give or take a few thousand. With the country’s student population increasing by 7 to 8 percent each year, that means the number could grow by another 6,000 in 2016. Since not all of Quezon City’s students actually reside in the city, or even within Metro Manila, student housing is a key concern for both the schools and the parents. While most major institutes of learning offer in-campus housing, there usually isn’t enough. Thus, the students who don’t have relatives living nearby need to find residences in the dorms and boarding houses that mushroom outside the campuses. Even this has become difficult, as the demand is exceedingly high. Understanding how crucial education is to the country’s youth, and its very future, Vista Residences (VRI)—the condominium arm of the country’s premier property developer, Vista Land—offers a series of towers designed specifically to cater to the needs of students and faculty. Called the “University Series,” the eight towers already in this exemplary roster will soon be joined by the ninth, Vista Flats, ready to rise as the group’s second condominium in Katipunan Avenue.
Vista Flats: Raising the Level of Student Homes in Katipunan
VISTA Flats will very soon over Quezon City’s U-Belt, right at the corner of Katipunan and B. Gonzales Street—almost directly in front of the border between Miriam College and Ateneo de Manila. Rather uniquely laid out, the tower’s triangular footprint makes perfect use of the three-sided, more
than 1,000 square-meter property. The vertical village will rise up to 37 storeys with six for parking, two for businesses, the ground floor for commercial establishments, and an additional floor for an amenities area. The remaining 27 storeys will be residential with 24 units per floor. Because of its unusual shape, the unit sizes range from 18.23 to 24.42 square-meter studios, to 27.71 to 30.96 square-meter one-bedroom residences—each complete with a study and dining area, kitchen, and toilet & bath. In the interest of motivating our students to enjoy learning and focus on their studies, Vista Flats’s 37th floor amenities area offers an e-Library, a fitness gym, a swimming pool with a sun deck, a landscaped balcony, and a multi-purpose function room for hosting school meetings or study groups. All of the towers in the VRI University Series are equipped with these facilities. Another interesting feature in the design of the University Series condominiums is that each building uses solar panels in an effort to decrease their carbon footprint. The solar panels will be used to power select communal areas and mobile charging stations. Further in the future, Vista Residences hopes to use solar energy to supply even more of its buildings’ electricity needs. Possibly more crucial, and always a key concern of the VRI group, is the students’ safety and security. Vista Flats will be designed so that its residents—and their parents—have less to worry about. The building will be equipped with a guarded reception area and parking floors, smoke and fire alarms, sprinkler systems, backup generators, and CCTV systems
VISTA Flats features an E-library, an ideal learning hub for its student residents.
WITH its “University Series,” Vista Residences is giving students better living options while in school.
in most of the public areas. For even better safety, the main entrance of the building will be facing the quieter B. Gonzales street, instead of the rather busy and hectic Katipunan Avenue. As part of the Vista Residences’ roster of vertical villages, Vista Flats also comes with leasing options proprietary to VRI properties and designed to take the difficulties of leasing off owners’ shoulders. Particular to the University Series towers is the ‘Condormitel’ program. Selected units are leased and run as dormitories. There are from two to four occupants sharing a unit. There is also a dormitory manager who looks after the residents and enforces certain rules such as curfews and study hours. This offers the protection and discipline of a school dorm while being in a more modern and comfortable setting.
Easy Transportation, StudentFriendly Establishments, A Stone’s Throw from School… One Can’t Get a Better Location
VISTA Flats is located perfectly for anyone studying or working in Ateneo, U.P. or Miriam College. Beyond being designed with features and amenities that respond to the specific needs of students and the academe, the tower stands right in the middle of one of Quezon City’s commercial and residential hubs. With the Light Railway Transit (LRT) 2, a brisk walk or a quick ride away, residents not only have affordable and easy access to the rest of Quezon City, but also to practically most of Metro Manila as well. At the foot of Vista Flats is an expanse of the metro’s most popular dining establishments, groceries, bookstores, gyms and internet cafés. While right behind the frenetic Katipunan Avenue is a spread of residential villages offering a quiet and safety perimeter, as well as the places of worship that are often found within local communities. Down Katipunan Avenue sprawls the newfangled mall— the U.P. Town Center. This allows residents more lifestyle options and a place to de-stress and bond— creating student friendships that last most lifetimes. Along Aurora Boulevard are even more commercial centers, markets, and hospitals. With its University Series condominiums, Vista Residences is giving students better living options while in school, trusting that this,
VISTA Flats will soon tower over Quezon City’s U-Belt, right at the corner of Katipunan and B. Gonzales Street – fronting Miriam College and Ateneo de Manila.
in turn, will result in helping them learn better.
An Investment in Education, a Lifestyle and the Future
VISTA Residences’ University Series condominiums offer four projects that have already been completely sold out: Crown Tower University Belt, Vista 309 Katipunan, Vista Taft and 878 España. Earlier this year, the group launched Vista GL Taft, Vista Heights, just off Legarda, Vista Recto on bustling C.M. Recto Avenue, and Vista Brenthill in the country’s summer capital, Baguio City. Vista Flats is the ninth tower of its series. These condominiums are also amazing investments, as they are also all located within the metro’s key commercial and business centers, allowing access not just to schools and universities but also to the main places of work and entertainment, as well as to transportation hubs allowing for easy movement. These are investments that can be passed on from one generation to the next. While the university towers were designed for the more scholarly, its sizes, values, and locations also make them perfect homes for new families, and those who work in the metro, needing a ‘halfway home’ closer to their offices. Learn more about Vista Flats in Katipunan and the Vista Residences’ other University Series condominiums and properties. Call 650-0753; mobile number: 09998871705; or visit www. vistaresidences.com.ph. For news and other announcements, follow vistaresidencesofficial on Facebook and vistarescondo on Instagram.
VISTA Flats offers a fitness gym, a swimming pool, landscaped balcony, and a multi-purpose halls for hosting school meetings or study groups.
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IS PHL READY TO SCRAP RICE IMPORT QUOTAS IN 2017? B A S. D | Correspondent
VISTA FLATS www.businessmirror.com.ph
ALACAÑANG is finalizing the details for the awarding of the P170-billion Bicol railway-expansion project, as well as the P3.5-billion upgrade of the Naga airport runway, both of which would be completed under the next administration. Speaking at a multisectoral forum in Naga City on Tuesday, President Aquino confirmed that Japan has agreed to grant a concessional loan for the Bicol Express railway S “B ,” A
SPECIAL REPORT
Samsung takes on Apple with 2 Android phones with jumbo screens SAMSUNG has unveiled two new Android smartphones with jumbo screens, as it seeks to recapture some of the sales lost to Apple after larger iPhones came out last year. Samsung said on Thursday that the new Galaxy Note 5 and S6 Edge Plus will start shipping on August 21 in the US and Canada. Usually, Note phones don’t come out until, well, after Apple’s new iPhone models in September. The timing reflects a shift in fortunes for a company that pioneered jumbo phones with the original Note in 2011. Now, Samsung needs to beat Apple to the punch, or risk seeing its products drowned out by all the attention on the iPhone, IDC analyst Ramon Llamas said. The new phones from Samsung have screens measuring 5.7 inches diagonally, the same as last year’s Note 4, yet both are lighter and thinner. They are comparable to Apple’s 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus, the larger of the two new iPhones. Samsung’s Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge phones, which are closer in size to the regular iPhone 6, came out in April.
said the NTC’s justification for the approval of the merger “is not only contradictory, but is also without any basis in law.” The telecommunications titan accused the NTC of tailor-fitting the law to favor its rival, as the NTC deferred to resolve the issues that PLDT raised with regard to competition and
capitalization requirements. The NTC, in approving the debtto-equit y transaction bet ween Globe and Bayantel, ruled that issues on competition, capitalization and compliance with the requirements of the Public Telecommunications Policy Act are not within the jurisdiction of the agency, but is within the competence of the Rehabilitation Court. However, PLDT pointed out that such issues were not for the court to resolve. Citing Republic Act 7925, PLDT said the NTC should have been the body to resolve these matters to “ensure fair and competitive conduct of telecommunications entities, such as Bayantel.” “Clearly, the honorable commission contradicted itself and
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Conclusion
NE of the things that the new administration would have to think about next year is whether it would push for the retention of rice-import quotas in 2017. Instead of slapping tariffs on all rice imports, the Philippine government decided to maintain the so-called quantitative restriction (QR) on rice to prevent the influx of cheap rice from neighboring Asian countries. The QR has been in place for more than two decades. When the second extension for the trade protection expired in 2012, Manila opted to negotiate for its retention. Following negotiations with countries that have expressed their intention to consider Manila’s bid, the World Trade Organization allowed the Philippines to continue implementing the QR until June 30, 2017.
PESO EXCHANGE RATES ■ US 46.2870
In pushing for the retention of rice-import caps, Manila said removing the QR would threaten the livelihood of some 2.4 million rice farmers, who are small landholders. To maintain rice quotas, Manila had to raise the minimum access volume (MAV) of rice to 805,200 metric tons (MT), from the previous 350,000 MT. Rice imports that fall within MAV are slapped a tariff of 35 percent, lower than the 40-percent tariff imposed on “out-MAV” shipments. The rationale behind the implementation of the QR, an expert said, is to ensure that Filipino farmers would be able to compete once the quotas are removed. A study, titled “Benchmarking Philippine Rice Economy Relative to Major Rice-Producing Countries in Asia,” found that rice production is relatively competitive in the Philippines. Findings, however, suggested that more needs to be done to ensure that farmers will survive once the government fully opens up the country’s rice market. C A
■ JAPAN 0.3720 ■ UK 72.1337 ■ HK 5.9691 ■ CHINA 7.2384 ■ SINGAPORE 32.8883 ■ AUSTRALIA 34.1879 ■ EU 51.2814 ■ SAUDI ARABIA 12.3406 Source: BSP (18 August 2015)