Shopify’s 37-year-old German-born CEO, Tobias Lütke, is Canada’s newest tech billionaire (again). After losing the distinction following a short-selling attack on the Ottawa-based e-commerce giant, Lütke (and Shopify) bounced back after strong quarterly numbers and a $1 million-per-minute Black Friday. For better or worse, Lütke has become Canadian tech’s portrait of success, like Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie before him. Is Lütke prepared to handle the heat of the spotlight, or are we all just waiting for a few more billionaires to join him onstage? Bloomberg’s Gerrit De Vynck joins to discuss.
Speaking of the spotlight, Pokémon Go developer Niantic is preparing to jump back in with a new AR game based upon the Harry Potter universe. Can Niantic learn from past poké-mistakes and create an augmented reality experience with lasting impact?
Tune in as CanCon’s podcast crew – Gerrit De Vynck, tech, telecom and media report at Bloomberg; Sameer Chhabra, MobileSyrup Staff Reporter; Patrick O’Rourke, MobileSyrup Senior Editor and Douglas Soltys, BetaKit Editor-in-Chief – makes bad sports analogies before discussing the cultural import of Pacific Rim 2.
Subscribe via: RSS, iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play
CanCon Podcast Episode 96 (12/04/17)
Canadian tech’s Steve Nash (allow us to explain…)
Coder in Tweed Cap Is New Canada Billionaire, Shopify Soars
Shopify reports $1 million in sales per minute during Black Friday peak
Bruce Croxon says Shopify’s short-seller response falls short, but company’s metrics don’t
Shopify’s Tobi Lütke named chair of Canadian government’s digital industries table
Harry Potter Go is coming for your unlocked phone
Here’s everything you need to know about Canada’s unlocking fee ban
Developer behind Pokémon Go is working on an AR Harry Potter mobile game
Pokémon Go creator raises $200 million ahead of Harry Potter game launch
Canadian Content music clip (under fair dealing): “If I Had $1000000” by Barenaked Ladies
This story was originally published on BetaKit.
MobileSyrup may earn a commission from purchases made via our links, which helps fund the journalism we provide free on our website. These links do not influence our editorial content. Support us here.