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2025-01-31 18:35:00| Fast Company

American Honda issued a major recall over engine concerns this week. On Wednesday, the company recalled 295,000 vehicles, including Honda and Acura models. In the announcement, Honda said owners of the recalled vehicles need to update the field injection control unit (FI-ECU) software due to the fact that the system could cause the engine to spontaneously malfunction.Honda explained in a news release, “Due to improper programming of the FI-ECU, sudden changes in the throttle could illuminate the check engine light and cause the engine to lose drive power, hesitate and/or stall, increasing the risk of a crash or injury. American Honda self-diagnosed this issue by monitoring telematics information and determined the need to perform the software update of the supplier part.”  The company also said that owners of the affected models will receive notice of the issue in the mail by March. They should immediately take their vehicle to an authorized dealership to have the issue remedied, free of charge. The company listed three models impacted by the recall in the release. Those models are: 2023-2025 Honda Pilot, 2022-2025 Acura MDX Type S, and 2021-2025 Acura TLX Type S. “Owners of these vehicles can also determine if their vehicles require repair by visiting www.recalls.honda.com or www.recalls.acura.com, or by calling (888) 234-2138,” the notice said. Last year, Honda recalled more than 750,000 vehicles in the U.S. due to an airbag issue. At the time, the company said a faulty sensor could cause the airbags to inflate even when there is not a crash. In this weeks release, Honda said that, at present, it has “not received any confirmed reports of crashes or injuries related to this issue.”


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2025-01-31 18:19:25| Fast Company

After 17 years, Airbnbs Brian Chesky is hitting resetreinventing the business from the ground up and expanding the brand in unexpected ways. Chesky joins Rapid Response to explain why now is the right time for Airbnbs “great reinvention” and takes us inside his relationship with Sam Altman, revealing previously unheard details about Altman’s brief yet tumultuous dismissal from OpenAI. This is an abridged transcript of an interview from Rapid Response, hosted by the former editor-in-chief of Fast Company Bob Safian. From the team behind the Masters of Scale podcast, Rapid Response features candid conversations with todays top business leaders navigating real-time challenges. Subscribe to Rapid Response wherever you get your podcasts to ensure you never miss an episode. You said recently that Airbnb would undergo the greatest reinvention in the company’s history in the months ahead. Why is that necessary? Can you share any details about it? For the last four years, what we’ve been doing is really trying to perfect our core business. We basically asked everyone who didn’t like Airbnb, why don’t you like Airbnb? What are your issues with the service? We were really methodical. We blueprinted the end-to-end experience for guests and hosts. And over the last four years, we’ve made 535 features and upgrades. I think our core service is better than ever. It’s not ever going to be finished. It’s kind of like if you want to build a skyscraper and you’re a four-story building, you can’t just keep building new floors. At some point, you need to rebuild the foundation so you can hold more floors. This is the moment where we want to expand the Airbnb model beyond a place to stay. Most people think ideas are too late. Often Silicon Valley ideas are too early, and we probably weren’t ready to expand beyond our core business until this moment. I think we can take the Airbnb model and bring it to all these different categories of traveling and living. We’ve had to basically rebuild the app from the ground up to do this. We’ve had to build out entire new functions we didn’t really have before. We had to reorganize the company. We had to become much more collaborative. It’s very rare to get out of your groove at this age. It’s kind of like learning a new language later in life. It’s a real challenge, but it’s the best kind of challenge. It keeps us young and keeps us from becoming a big old company by having to fundamentally change and reinvent who we are. But you must have to make tough choices in this, like a one-stop shop. It could sound like sort of a less focused, more catch-all business where you’re in all kinds of things, right? Because you have this community and customer base that you can leverage and introduce to different kinds of experiences and tools. You can’t go into everything. Yeah, so the governor is three things. Number one, you can’t do everything well at once. You have to focus. You have to pick. Number two, you can only do things you can do well. We can’t do everything well. We should only do things where there’s a reason we do it. We track the number of devices that access Airbnb. That number is 1.6 billion a year. So 1.6 billion devices a year, which could easily, if the average person uses two devices, mean 800 million, close to a billion, people are using Airbnb every year. Think about that. That’s a very big number. Now, we have enough traffic. We could just slap our logo on something that’s not any better than anyone else’s product, and it would sell some, but we don’t want to do that. If we put our logo on something, it’s because there’s something different, something better, something more authentic, higher quality, easier to book. So, the first thing is we can’t do everything at once well. Number two, we should only do things we can do well and do differently. And the third is, I think Airbnb is known for user interface, great design, and creating a really simple experience. So everything has to be coherent and cohesive. People use Airbnb to travel, and eventually, they’ll probably use Airbnb in their own city, but they’ll probably use it to explore their community. So if we were to think about that as a workflow, like going on a trip, moving somewhere for a month, that is a coherent way to keep the interface really simple and really cross-selling different things in a way that would make sense to a customer. So those are, I guess, our big principles. I’m going to change gears just a little bit. Sam Altman recently said that you helped him during that brief period in 2023 when he was ousted from OpenAI. You saved him from making some mistakes. Can you share anything about that and the sort of advice you gave him? Yeah, sure. Maybe just to back up, I’ve known Sam for like 16 years because he was with Y Combinator. He was the first big Y Combinator founder, I think, in 2006, and then he became president of Y Combinator. We kept in touch. He launched ChatGPT November 30, 2022, and the world literally changed in about three to four days. On November 1, 2022, no one was talking about AI other than people interested in AI. By December 5, the whole world was talking about AI. So it completely ushered in the AI era. At that moment, I told Sam, “You’re basically going to go through everything I’ve gone through in the last 10 years, but you’re going to go through it in like a year.” I said, “You’re going to have a crazy rocket ship, and I’m here if you need help.” At that point, we started meeting every, I don’t know, every couple of weeks or something. I was just giving him advice. Then it’s the next November, I think it was, and I got a text on my phone. I’m in a WhatsApp group, and everyone said, “Oh, did you hear the news? Sam was fired from OpenAI.” And I’m like, “Fired?” I texted Sam, “What the hell is going on?” And I was one of the first people who responded to it. And he said, “So brutal. I was fired. I don’t really know why I was fired.” And I was like, “You don’t know why you were fired, but you were fired, and it was made public immediately.” Then the circumstances got even fishier. I was told that Microsoft was only given a 15- or 30-minute heads up. There was no actual investigation, and Greg Brockman, the other cofounder, was removed from the board immediately. I said, “Okay, I don’t know what happened, but you deserve a fair process.” I kind of just helped him with what to do over the next three to four days. I gave him quite a bit of advice on PR. I basically told him, “You have to do two things. Tell them what you know and don’t know. Don’t point fingers at anyone; don’t blame anyone. Just tell them what you know and don’t know. Then say, the most important thing is to turn your attention to the employees and make sure they’re taken care of, the company’s taken care of.” And, ultimately, I think he was going to do all this anyway, but the way he handled it, I think the employees rally rallied to his side. The board eventually realized an AI company without AI talent isn’t really a company.  Essentially, what we did was help bring everyone to the table and realize this is an internet treasure. This is one of the most important companies in the world ever in Silicon Valley, ushering in this AI gold rush. But also, we have to set a good example of Silicon Valley. We want to show that founders are protected to some extent to ensure fair processes. We don’t want to invite more board activism. We really want to make sure that this really important company is held together because the world really needs this innovation and advancement. People way beyond me were able to find a resolution. I was just trying to be a helpful person. I have no official role in OpenAI. I just tried to keep a company together. At the end of the whole thing, Sam asked me, “How can I repay you?” I told him what Ron Conway and some other people told me when I wanted to repay them for helping me. They said, “Pass it forward,” and that’s what I told him. I said, “I’m not asking for anything other than to pass it on to the next generation.”


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-01-31 18:18:02| Fast Company

It looks like brothers Jake and Logan Paul wont be squaring off in the boxing ring anytime soon. Instead, they are launching a family reality series, Paul American, starting March 27 on HBO Max.  Promotional social media posts on Tuesday teasing an “announcement” tricked fans into believing they could be going head-to-head in the ring on March 27. However, it was all a big ruse to create hype for their first foray into reality TV. Were the true American family, Jake Paul says in the series trailer. What exactly that means, youll have to tune in to find out.  Everyone thinks they know Jake and Logan Paultheyre the original superstars of influencer culture and built their brand on being unfiltered. But PAUL AMERICAN goes deeper,” Nina Rosenstein, executive vice president of HBO Programming, Late Night and Specials, said in a press release. “This show uncovers a side of their relationships weve never seen, as brothers, sons, partners, as well as Logans transition into fatherhood. Its a raw and unexpected look into their world.  [Photo: courtesy of Max] In a joint statement, the Paul brothers added, “Weve built our lives in front of the world, but PAUL AMERICAN is the raw, unfiltered truth behind everything you think you know about us. It isn’t just about the headlines or the viral momentsits about the journey that got us here. . . . Its real and honest, showing the world a side of us theyve never seen, and we couldnt be more excited to share this story with our fans.”  The controversial brothers rose to fame on the now-defunct social media site Vine in the 2010s. Both went on to build impressive followings on YouTube, generating a string of controversies along the way (In 2018, Logan posted a video that included footage of a man who had recently hanged himself). At one point, Jake also had a recurring role on the Disney Channel sitcom Bizaardvark. However Disney cut ties in 2017 halfway through filming its second season In recent years, both turned to the professional fighting world. Jake recently fought the 58-year-old boxing legend Mike Tyson and won. Logan is a former WWE United States Champion and calls himself the best heel professional wrestling has seen since professional wrestling started. Both have also built out their business empires, with Jake launching a mens personal care brand called W and Logan cofounding the beverage company Prime and snack brand Lunchly. This newest venture will now show another side of the pair, including appearances by their parents; Logan Paul’s fiancée, Nina Adgal, and Jake Paul’s girlfriend, Jutta Leerdam, a Dutch world champion speed skater. The eight-episode series will culminate with a season finale on May 15. Villains and bad guys make the most amount of people tune in, says Jake Paul. Theyll be counting on it. 


Category: E-Commerce

 

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