Thursday, February 28, 2019

Tips for Debugging Your HTML and Fix Errors

While developing a web page, visual errors are almost inevitable. It becomes really frustrating when, after hours of coding, you notice that a certain element is not properly aligned or colored, or worse is not cross-browser compatible. Debugging HTML or CSS code can really slow down a developer’s creative momentum. But if you have the knowledge of how to detect and fix rendering issues properly, web development becomes more fun and interesting. Every issue faced by a developer is unique in its own way, but if you adhere to some basic rules and checklists, coding will become much easier. Let’s take a look at the following article and find out how debugging can help you fix common issues in HTML.

Syntax Error

While encountering errors, the instinct of a developer jumps to one question most of the time, whether the code is syntactically correct. No matter how experienced you are, mistakes like typos or an incorrectly closed tag are quite common.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2TlFWM5

The Gorilla Guide to Serverless on Kubernetes, Chapter 3: The Serverless Landscape

The Players

Even though serverless feels like the hot new thing, it's actually not new; it's been around for about five years. Node.js is the predominant language in the field, but Java, Go, Python, and C# are also popular. Different platforms provide different ways to invoke other languages indirectly, too.

As you might expect, all big public cloud vendors have a serverless play: Amazon has Lambda, Google has Cloud Functions, and Microsoft has Azure Functions.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2IFSCcU

Project Risk Management: Know How To Mitigate Risks

A risk is an uncertainty that cannot be avoided but can definitely be managed. Managing risk is very important especially when it comes to project management as the risk can impact your project positively or negatively. But in either case, your final outcome will have deviated from what you have promised. Thus, project risk management becomes a vital skill that every project manager must possess to ensure the success of their projects. In this article on project risk management, I will give you a complete insight into how risks are handled and managed in a project.

Project Risk Management



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2TjvQM0

Security Challenges With IAC and How To Overcome Them

This post was originally published here.

Infrastructure as a Code or IAC has changed the way we deploy environments for web services and software. Developers don’t need to deal with hardware configurations or work on actual devices and operating systems; there is no need to have an in-house team of infrastructure specialists either. Instead, everything is done via software now.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2IFSA4M

Automated Test Changes

To understand the current and future state of automated testing, we spoke to 14 IT professionals intimately familiar with automated testing. We asked them, "What are the most significant changes to automated testing over the last year?"

Here's what the respondents told us:



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2TgLYhj

Class Attribute vs. Instance Attribute In Python: What You Might Have Missed

As an object-oriented language, Python provides two scopes for attributes: class attributes and instance attributes.

While the instance attribute in Python has exactly the same characteristics and definition as the other object-oriented languages, the class attribute is always mistakingly considered to be the exact equivalent of the static attribute in Java or C++. To be accurate, class attributes in Python and static attributes in Java or C++ have a lot in common, however, they have behavioral differences that I will highlight in this article.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2IJjLvi

Siemens launches new enterprise class embedded Linux solution for embedded systems development

submitted by /u/microface
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2UdAecG

Another hour!

It's February 28, 2019 at 05:15PM

Paper: Hyperscan: A Fast Multi-pattern Regex for Modern CPUs

submitted by /u/alexeyr
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2GPwtac

Mirakl raises $70 million to manage the marketplace of your e-commerce website

French startup Mirakl raised a $70 million funding round. Bain Capital is leading the round with existing investors 83North, Felix Capital and Elaia Partners also participating.

If you’ve bought a few products from a third-party seller on an e-commerce website that isn’t Amazon or Alibaba, chances are you’ve used Mirakl in the past. The company has built a solution to manage the marketplace of your e-commerce platform.

While Mirakl doesn’t have a ton of customers, each customer is very valuable. The company has worked with some of the biggest names in e-commerce so that they could add a new revenue stream with a marketplace. Examples include Best Buy in Canada, Walmart in Mexico, Office Deport and Darty.

The startup also lets you create B2B marketplaces for bulk selling and other complicated transactions. Sellers can set minimum and maximum quantities and customize their listings.

In 2018, the startup managed to add 60 customers and launch 37 marketplaces — it doubled the gross merchandise volume compared to 2017. And it’s true that marketplaces are attractive. You can greatly increase your sales without any physical infrastructure investment as third-party sellers handle logistics.

Behind the scene, Mirakl has developed connectors that work with multiple e-commerce platforms. After setting up Mirakl, your third-party sellers will also get their own on-boarding back end. And Mirakl continuously helps you when it comes to maintaining a certain level of quality and handling orders.

More recently, Mirakl has developed a catalog manager so that you can more easily manage product listings. It lets you get product information, merge product listings and moderate your platform in general. Any e-commerce website can use it, not just websites that operate a Mirakl marketplace.

The company has also launched a services marketplace so that you can upsell your customers before they check out with extended warranties and insurance products from third-party companies.

Mirakl works with global B2B platforms as well as retail websites that usually operate in a country or a handful of countries. 30 percent of retail clients are French, 30 percent are American and 40 percent are from the rest of the world. The startup charges an upfront fee as well as a monthly subscription that varies according to the success of your marketplace.

With today’s funding round, the company plans to do more of the same, at a bigger scale. Mirakl will expand the team, expand to new countries and improve its product offering.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2H5jiRP

Another hour!

It's February 28, 2019 at 04:15PM

Fortnite Season 8 is now available, and it includes pirates, cannons and volcano lava

Fortnite, the world’s most popular game right now with some 200 million players, has just announced that its much anticipated Season 8 is available.

For those of you who don’t play Fortnite, the title takes on an episodic approach with new features, tools and maps released every few months. That keeps things fresh, gamers engaged and the money flowing since each new season offers a Battle Pass which costs around $10 and unlocks a load of goodies, including skins and emote dance moves.

Season 8 is pretty much what the leaks this week suggested. The theme is pirates with new skins that include a gigantic banana suit, pirates and snakes, and pirate cannon is a new weapon that’s been added. Cannons can dish out 100 damage when there’s a direct hit, or administer 50 damage of those in the impact area — it can also be used to fire players to new locations.

The map is also a major Fortnite focus, and Season 8 has added lava to the existing volcano. Stepping on lava gives layers 1 damage point per touch while there are volcanic vents that can be used to send a player or vehicle into the air using a gust of hot air.

On the gaming playing side, the major addition is ‘Party Assist’ mode which lets players bring their friends into Fortnite’s daily or weekly challenges. Those challenges are important to players since they unlock treasures, including skins, and, in fact, those who played Season 7 could earn a free Battle Pass for Season 8 by completing the right challenges. That might have saved a few million parents $10.

Those are the main additions, though game-maker Epic Games has chucked in a few little touches — including extending the somewhat comical ‘infinite dab’ feature from 11 hours to 12, meaning that your character will keep dancing a little longer when left in the lobby.

I can’t help but think Season 7 was a greater leap — since the addition of planes and ziplines really changed how players get around — but we’ll have to see how the gaming public reacts. This time around, a lot of the focus is on skins and emotes, rather than features.

A recent report suggested Fortnite’s revenue had dipped in January, but that was pretty unfair because its the month that followed a surge in spending around the December Battle Pass and also, more generally, a surge around the Christmas holidays.

Sources told us recently Epic Games banked $3 billion in profit across its entire business in 2018, thanks in particular to Fortnite, and it needs to keep its season releases compelling if that streak is to continue. There’s a lot riding on Season 8.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2GPpqyc

Here are the most in-demand programming jobs and languages, according to Hired

Looking for a high-paying, in-demand job as a programmer? Learning to code for blockchain applications is the way to go, according to a survey from the job placement organization, Hired.

In a survey of 98,000 developers on the company’s platform, Hired assessed the kinds of jobs that are most in-demand; the languages that companies are most interested in hiring for; and the top average salaries for careers in several major technology markets including London, New York, Paris, and San Francisco.

The results — as they say — may surprise you.

Actually, they probably won’t. Across the industry demand for blockchain engineers and security engineers have increased the most, according to Hired’s data. Companies requesting programmers with blockchain experience shot up a whopping 517% in 2018 from 2017, while company searches for security engineers were up 132% over the year ago period, according to the company’s data.

Across all geographies, the jobs with the highest paying salaries, on average, were divided among security engineers, search engineers, blockchain engineers, natural language processing engineers, machine learning engineers, and gaming engineers, according to the data from Hired.

Here’s the breakdown for San Francisco.

“In New York, San Francisco and Toronto, blockchain engineers are among the top three highest paid,” Hired chief executive Mehul Patel, wrote in a blog post about the data. “When you zoom into salary data for software engineers in key tech hubs, it also speaks to how much talent needs fluctuate from city to city. For example, gaming engineers are the highest paid group in New York, while demand for natural language processing engineer salaries are soaring in Toronto.”

Despite increasing demand, blockchain skills still aren’t top of mind among developers, according to the survey. Only 12% of the programmers surveyed on Hired’s platform said that they were most interested in learning about the technology.

That disconnect also applies to the coding languages that are most in-demand and the number of developers who have experience programming in the language.

Candidates who know the programming language Go are the most in-demand, according to the Hired report, but when surveyed, only 7% of developers said they primarily work with it.

Other languages, like Scala, Ruby, Typescript and Kotlin are also highly valued by employers but have lower penetration rates among the developer community. Globally, Go is the most popular programming language that employers are looking for, while in San Francisco and Toronto there’s higher demand for Typescript experience, the Hired report indicated.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2IHddNU

Nigerian fintech firm TeamApt raises $5M, eyes global expansion

Nigerian fintech startup TeamApt has raised $5.5 million in capital in a Series A round led by Quantum Capital Partners.

The Lagos based firm will use the funds to expand its white label digital finance products and pivot to consumer finance with the launch of its AptPay banking app.

Founded by Tosin Eniolorunda, TeamApt supplies financial and payment solutions to Nigeria’s largest commercial banks — including Zenith, UBA, and ALAT.

For Eniolorunda, launching the fintech startup means competing with his former employer, the later stage Nigerian tech company Interswitch.

The TeamApt founder is open about his company going head to head not only with his former employer, but other Nigerian payment gateway startups.

“Yes, we are in competition with Interswitch,” Eniolorunda said. But he also said that the Nigerian fintech startups Paystack and Flutterwave—both of which facilitate payments for businesses— are competitors as well.

TeamApt, whose name is derivative of aptitude, bootstrapped its way to its Series A by generating revenue project to project working for Nigerian companies, according to CEO Eniolorunda.

“To start, we closed a deal with Computer Warehouse Group to build a payment solution for them and that’s how we started bootstrapping,” he said. A project soon followed for Fidelity Bank Nigeria.

TeamApt now has a developer team of 40 in Lagos, according to Eniolorunda, who spent 6 years at Interswitch as developer and engineer himself, before founding the startup in 2015 .

“The 40 are out of a total staff of about 72 so the firm is a major engineering company. We build all the IP and of course use open source tools,” he said.

TeamApt’s commercial bank product offerings include Moneytor— a digital banking service for financial institutions to track transactions with web and mobile interfaces—and Monnify, an enterprise software suite for small business management.

TeamApt worked with Sterling Bank Nigeria to develop its Sterling Onepay mobile payment app and POS merchant online platform, Sterling Bank’s Chief Information Officer Moronfolu Fasinro told TechCrunch.

On performance, TeamApt claims 26 African bank clients and processes $160 million in monthly transactions, according to company data. Though it does not produce public financial results, TeamApt claimed revenue growth of 4,500 percent over a three year period.

Quantum Capital Partners, a Lagos based investment firm founded by Nigerian banker Jim Ovia, confirmed it verified TeamApt’s numbers.

“Our CFO sat with them for about two weeks,” Elaine Delaney said.

TeamApt’s results and the startup’s global value proposition factored into the fund’s decision to serve as sole-investor in the $5.5 million round.

“The problem that they’re solving might be African but the technology is universal. ‘Can it be applied to any other market?’ of course it can,” said Delaney.

Delaney will take a board seat with TeamApt “as a supportive investor,” she said.

TeamApt plans to develop more business and consumer based offerings. “We’re beginning to pilot into much more merchant and consume facing products where we’re building payment infrastructure to connect these banks to merchants and businesses,” CEO Tosin Eniolorunda said.

Part of this includes the launch of AptPay, which Eniolorunda describes as “a push payment, payment infrastructure” to “centralize…all services currently used on banking mobile apps.”

The company recently received its license from the Nigerian Central Bank to operate as a payment switch in the country.

On new markets, “Nigeria comes first. But we’re also looking at some parts of Europe. Canada is also hot on list,” said Eniolorunda.  He wouldn’t specific a country but said to look for a TeamApt expansion announcement by fourth quarter 2019.

TeamApt joins several fintech firms in Africa that announced significant rounds, expansion, or partnerships over the last year.  As covered by TechCrunch, in September 2018, Nigeria’s Paga raised $10 million and announced possible expansion in Ethiopia, Asia, and Mexico. Kenyan payment company Cellulant raised $53 million in 2018, targeted to boost its presence across Africa. And in January, Flutterwave partnered with Visa to launch the GetBarter global payment product.

The fintech space has also been the source of speculation regarding the continent’s first tech IPO on a major exchange, including Interswitch’s much anticipated and delayed public offering.

TeamApt’s CEO is open about the company’s future intent to list. “The project code name for the recent funding was NASDAQ. We’re clear about becoming a public company,” said Eniolorunda.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2Tn7Rvo

NetEase is the latest Chinese tech giant to lay off a big chunk of its staff

NetEase, China’s second-biggest online games publisher with a growing ecommerce segment, is laying off a significant number of its employees, adding to a list of Chinese tech giants that have shed staff following the Lunar New Year.

A NetEase employee who was recently let go confirmed with TechCrunch that the company had fired a large number of people spanning multiple departments, including ecommerce, education, agriculture (yes, founder and executive officer Ding Lei has a thing for organic farming) and public relations, although downsizing at Yanxuan, its ecommerce brand that sells private-label goods online and offline, had started before the Lunar New Year holiday.

Multiple Chinese media outlets covered the layoff on Wednesday. According to a report from Caijing Magazine, Yanxuan fired 30-40 percent of its staff; the agricultural brand Weiyang got a 50 percent cut; the education unit downsized from 300 to 200 employees; and 40 percent of NetEase’s public relations staff was gone.

A spokesperson from NetEase evaded TechCrunch’s questions about the layoff but said the company is “indeed undergoing a structural optimization to narrow its focus.” The goal, according to the person, is to “boost innovation and organizational efficiency so NetEase can fully play to its own strengths and adapt to market competition in the longer term.”

NetEase CEO Ding Lei pictured picking Longjing tea leaves in Hangzhou. Photo: NetEase Yanxuan via Weibo

Oddly, ecommerce and education appear to be some of NetEase’s brighter spots. The company singled them out alongside music streaming during its latest earnings call as the three sectors that saw “strong profit growth potential” and “will be the focus of [the company’s] next phase of strategic growth.” The staff cuts, then, may represent an urgency to tighten the purse strings for even NetEase’s rosiest businesses.

The shakeup fits into market speculation about company staff cuts to save costs as China copes with a weakening domestic economy. JD.com, a rival to Alibaba, is firing 10 percent of its senior management to cut costs, Caixin reported last week. Ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing plans to let go 15 percent of its staff this year as part of a reorganization to boost internal efficiency, though it’s adding new members to focus on more promising segments.

Alibaba took an unexpected turn, announcing last week that it will continue to hire new talent in 2019. “We are poised to provide more resources to our platforms to help businesses navigate current environment and create more job opportunities overall,” the firm said in a statement.

2018 was a tough year for China’s games companies of all sorts. The industry took a hit after regulators froze all licensing approvals to go through a reshuffle, dragging down stock prices of big players like Tencent and NetEase. These companies continue to feel the chill even after approvals resumed, as the newly minted regulatory body imposes stricter checks on games, slowing down the application process altogether and delaying companies’ plans to monetize lucrative new titles.

That bleak domestic outlook compelled NetEase to take what Ding dubs a “two-legged” approach to game publishing, with one foot set in China and the other extending abroad. Tencent, too, has been finding new channels for its games through regional partners like Sea’s Garena in Southeast Asia.

NetEase started in 1997 and earned its name by making PC games and providing email services in the early years of the Chinese internet. More recently the company has intended to diversify its business by incubating projects across the board. It has so far enjoyed growth in segments like music streaming and ecommerce (which is reportedly swallowing up Amazon China’s import-led service) while stepping back from others such as comics publishing, an asset it is selling to youth-focused video streaming site Bilibili.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2BUftM0

Observability is for troubleshooting

submitted by /u/gianarb
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2NA0Vpd

Teaching children coding is a waste of time, OECD chief says

submitted by /u/alparsla
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2T68ABN

Nothing new but still cool. Source code for a raytracer... that would fit on the back of a business card with total size of 1337 bytes

submitted by /u/daffy_ch
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2Enb0S7

Another hour!

It's February 28, 2019 at 03:15PM

Spring for Apache Kafka — Part 1: Error Handling, Message Conversion, and Transaction Support

Following How to Work with Apache Kafka in Your Spring Boot Application, which shows how to get started with Spring Boot and Apache Kafka ®, we'll dig a little deeper into some of the additional features that the Spring for Apache Kafka project provides.Image title

Spring for Apache Kafka brings the familiar Spring programming model to Kafka. It provides the KafkaTemplate for publishing records and a listener container for asynchronous execution of POJO listeners. Spring Boot auto-configuration wires up much of the infrastructure so that you can concentrate on your business logic.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2IHEWy0

Solving for Probability From Entropy

New Part Day: The STM32 That Runs Linux

submitted by /u/real_genesix
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2XBQ9Ue

Another hour!

It's February 28, 2019 at 02:15PM

Job Interview Project Needs Feedback for Architecture Best Practices. (HELP CAPTAINS)

submitted by /u/acdota0001
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2VpC1vi

Spring Boot: A Work of Art

Spring Boot is a work of art. And yes, you should definitely believe the hype. It really is that good. Using Spring Boot, teams with significantly less experience with the Java and Spring frameworks can start delivering value with just a little training.

Spring Boot takes away most of the challenges associated with normal Spring app development. However, having said that, Spring Boot is an inherent part of the overall Spring framework.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2VpN87k

Octopus 🐙 is the tool for creating decentralized secured networks. 🌎

submitted by /u/snwfdhmp
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2tJgxxw

test && commit || revert ; pending

submitted by /u/fagnerbrack
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2UbL1UL

ETS Isn't TLS and You Shouldn't Use It

submitted by /u/alexeyr
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2BVOAHz

LibreOffice is in the Google Summer of Code 2019

submitted by /u/themikeosguy
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2GLrcAB

License plate detection without Machine Learning

submitted by /u/histoire_guy
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2NyBTH9

How a Kalman filter works, in pictures

submitted by /u/boozy_hippogrif
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2IHFPq7

How Unity is making (a subset of) C# as fast as C++

submitted by /u/Iamsodarncool
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2Ehg1Mb

GPU.js - GPU Accelerated JavaScript

submitted by /u/GeorgeIpsum
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2GQ7qE1

Gremlin Launches Chaos Monkey as a Service

submitted by /u/austingunter
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2GNlfmt

A curated directory of computer science resources.

submitted by /u/tramador7
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2IRixhw

Algorithm for the computation of Bernoulli numbers created by Ada Lovelace in 1843 for Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine.

submitted by /u/red_fern
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2U7bUZW

How many times have you used data to make the completely wrong choice?

submitted by /u/frankreyes
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2GRImw8

Getting Hooked on React Hooks

submitted by /u/mikejet
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EANWko

GraphQL in a Microservices Architecture

submitted by /u/kiarash-irandoust
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EfBDZk

The Visual Studio Blog | Visual Studio 2019 Release Candidate (RC) now available

submitted by /u/MeikTranel
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2XrX5TO

Speedy Scala Builds with Bazel at Databricks

submitted by /u/solidangle
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2tDPHqL

Linux Desktop Setup

submitted by /u/speckz
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2GOtYoD

Researchers hide malware in benign apps with the help of speculative execution

submitted by /u/alexeyr
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2NyqJlB

How to Create a Movie Search App 🎥 using ReactJS

submitted by /u/FlorinPop17
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EdeJ4E

A list of all the places you can get free dev-related stickers from

submitted by /u/m1guelpiedrafita
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2TmnNhj

Where Do I Put My Business Rules And Validation?

submitted by /u/jamesmh_
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2IBTq27

Top ten most popular docker images each contain at least 30 vulnerabilities

submitted by /u/_Garbage_
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2Ti7amZ

Atto: An insanely simple functional programming language that's (probably?) Turing-complete

submitted by /u/zesterer
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2BV55TW

Shadertoy (shader programming) for absolute beginners

submitted by /u/CountFrolic
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2HbehXI

New trailer for Dark Phoenix doesn’t bode well for the X-Men

The latest trailer is out for what could be the final installation in this iteration of the X-Men franchise — and things don’t look great (either for our heroes or for the franchise).

The Dark Phoenix saga is one of the most famous (and well-loved) narrative arcs in the comic book series long history, and one that would always prove tricky to reproduce on the big screen.

Setting aside the split over the rights to the franchise (which was owned by Fox, while Disney owned the rest of the Marvel Cinematic Universe), the Phoenix saga in the comics depends heavily on some plot elements that have yet to be introduced to the MCU.

Fox is only getting this second shot at recreating the storyline because the first time it was attempted it was a colossal mess.

After two strong showings (both creatively and at the box office), Fox’s latest foray into the wild world of the Uncanny X-Men team hit a stumbling block with the messy and misguided “Apocalypse”.

There’s still the individual narrative arcs of characters like “Logan” and “Deadpool”, which were both successes at the box office.

However, the franchise needs a good box office showing to sustain it. At least it has the beyond stellar cast of James McAvoy as Professor Xavier, Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique, Michael Fassbender as Magneto, plus “Game of Thrones” star Sophie Turner, who’s returning as Jean Grey.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2Tr2fQU

Go-Jek’s Get app officially launches in Thailand as Southeast Asia expansion continues

Go-Jek is extending its reach in Southeast Asia after its Thailand-based unit made its official launch, which included the addition of a new food delivery service.

Get, which is the name for Go-Jek business in Thailand, started out last year offering motorbike taxi on-demand services to a limited part of Thai capital city Bangkok, now the company said it has expanded the bikes across the city and added food and delivery options. Get’s management team is composed of former Uber staffers while CEO Pinya Nittayakasetwat was recruited from chat app Line’s food delivery business.

Over the last two months, Get claims to have completed two million trips in the past two months. There’s no word on when Get will add four-wheeled transport options, however. On the food side, Get is claiming to have 20,000 merchants on its platform but there are some issues. Rumming through the app, I found a number of listed restaurants that didn’t include menus. In those instances, customers have to input their dish and price which makes it pretty hard to use.

Go-Jek’s Get app in Thailand doesn’t include menus for a number of restaurants, making it nearly impossible to order

Grab is the dominant player in Thailand, where it offers taxis, private cars, motorbikes, delivery and food across eight markets in Southeast Asia. Go-Jek rose to success in its native Indonesia, where it began offering motorbikes on demand but has expanded to cover taxi, cars, food, general services on-demand and fintech. Its investors include Google, Tencent, Meituan and Sequoia India.

That’s the same playbook Grab is using, but Go-Jek is taking its time with its market expansions. Thailand represents its third new market beyond Indonesia, following launches in Vietnam and Singapore. The Philippines is another market where Go-Jek has voiced a desire to be present — it has even made an acquisition there — but regulatory issues are holding up a launch.

Regional expansion doesn’t come cheap and Go-Jek is in the midst of raising $2 billion to finance these moves. It recently closed $1 billion from existing investors, and Deal Street Asia reports that it could raise as much as $3 billion for the entire Series F round. That’s likely in response to Grab’s own fundraising plans. The Singapore-based company closed $2 billion last year, but it is looking to increase that total to $5 billion with a major injection from SoftBank’s Vision Fund a key piece of that puzzle.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2UdBEUe