Paul of Think Outside In:
Last week I learned that if you ‘Like’ something on Facebook, you give that entity permission to put updates (read: ads) in your newsfeed.
I had no clue this happened – really lame.
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Paul of Think Outside In: Last week I learned that if you ‘Like’ something on Facebook, you give that entity permission to put updates (read: ads) in your newsfeed. I had no clue this happened – really lame.
Paul of Think Outside In:
Last week I learned that if you ‘Like’ something on Facebook, you give that entity permission to put updates (read: ads) in your newsfeed.
I had no clue this happened – really lame.
Mathew Ingram: Given that the network now has close to 500 million users, and their average age is somewhere in the mid-40s, that group of university students who have grown up with Facebook haven’t been the most important segment for the company for a long time now — not to mention the fact that every…
Mathew Ingram:
Given that the network now has close to 500 million users, and their average age is somewhere in the mid-40s, that group of university students who have grown up with Facebook haven’t been the most important segment for the company for a long time now — not to mention the fact that every year millions of younger users have adopted the network as a social hub, and continue to do so regardless of the public outcry over privacy.
This is a major problem – the people who made the service popular are unhappy and now are in the minority and being ignored. This is what happened to MySpace and they are doing just swell now aren’t they.
Matthew Lasar: A slew of House Democrats have sent a letter to the Federal Communications Commission warning the agency not to go forward with its plan to partially reclassify ISPs as common carriers, a move needed to impose net neutrality rules. Figures.
Matthew Lasar:
A slew of House Democrats have sent a letter to the Federal Communications Commission warning the agency not to go forward with its plan to partially reclassify ISPs as common carriers, a move needed to impose net neutrality rules.
Figures.
This is stupid. I bet he still uses an iPhone too – hypocrite.
This is stupid. I bet he still uses an iPhone too – hypocrite.
Brad Stone: The magazine reported that representatives of Apple’s iTunes music service were asking the labels not to participate in Amazon’s promotion, adding that Apple punished those that did by withdrawing marketing support for those songs on iTunes. Hardly sounds illegal to me.
Brad Stone:
The magazine reported that representatives of Apple’s iTunes music service were asking the labels not to participate in Amazon’s promotion, adding that Apple punished those that did by withdrawing marketing support for those songs on iTunes.
Hardly sounds illegal to me.
Charlie Sorrel: The 4.1-inch OLED screen is thin. So thin that it is measured in micrometers. 80μm to be precise: A human hair is a comparatively hefty 100μm. Before I die I hope I hear someone say: “I remember when iPads used to not bend.” That would be sweet.
Charlie Sorrel:
The 4.1-inch OLED screen is thin. So thin that it is measured in micrometers. 80μm to be precise: A human hair is a comparatively hefty 100μm.
Before I die I hope I hear someone say: “I remember when iPads used to not bend.” That would be sweet.
Wonder who Ballmer fires today – probably the head janitor.
Wonder who Ballmer fires today – probably the head janitor.
Curt Hopkins: Trust Digital’s offerings support iPhone OS, Android, Web OS, Windows Mobile, and Symbian mobile operating systems. McAfee expects to mesh these with its ePolicy Orchestrator, its “enterprise-class, open platform to centrally manage security for systems, networks, data, and compliance solutions.” My guess is that mobile security is going to be big business –…
Curt Hopkins:
Trust Digital’s offerings support iPhone OS, Android, Web OS, Windows Mobile, and Symbian mobile operating systems. McAfee expects to mesh these with its ePolicy Orchestrator, its “enterprise-class, open platform to centrally manage security for systems, networks, data, and compliance solutions.”
My guess is that mobile security is going to be big business – we constantly hear about laptops with corporate data being lost, imagine now all the smart phones that are carrying the same data.
David Worthington: The executives that assumed Bach’s responsibilities report directly to CEO Steve Ballmer, and Bach’s management layer was eliminated. This re-org may or may not having anything to do with the iPad, and it really doesn’t matter. What does matter is that Allard is the guy you want to keep to fight the Android/WebOS/iPhoneOS…
David Worthington:
The executives that assumed Bach’s responsibilities report directly to CEO Steve Ballmer, and Bach’s management layer was eliminated.
This re-org may or may not having anything to do with the iPad, and it really doesn’t matter. What does matter is that Allard is the guy you want to keep to fight the Android/WebOS/iPhoneOS devices. On top of that Ballmer is the one that needs to go, not the one that needs to start micromanaging the company.
Chris Anderson: I’m delighted to announce that Wired’s first digital edition is now available for the iPad and soon for nearly all other tablets. We have always made our stories accessible online at Wired.com, but as successful as the site is, it is not a magazine. It’s $4.99 and a whopping 527mb (makes what I mentioned about…
Chris Anderson:
I’m delighted to announce that Wired’s first digital edition is now available for the iPad and soon for nearly all other tablets. We have always made our stories accessible online at Wired.com, but as successful as the site is, it is not a magazine.
It’s $4.99 and a whopping 527mb (makes what I mentioned about Android a couple of days ago more relevant) for just one month’s issue. Something has got to give with this pricing. That said in the few minutes I have had to play with it, I am impressed.
Mary Jo Foley: Allard’s note was entitled “Decide. Change. Reinvent,” and doesn’t mention the canceled Courier tablet project, which my sources claimed contributed to Allard’s decision to resign. I think when your company throws away an awesome project such as the Courier, well then you kinda have to resign.
Mary Jo Foley:
Allard’s note was entitled “Decide. Change. Reinvent,” and doesn’t mention the canceled Courier tablet project, which my sources claimed contributed to Allard’s decision to resign.
I think when your company throws away an awesome project such as the Courier, well then you kinda have to resign.
In short no. This is Ballmer grasping at straws, throwing pennies at a problem that needs millions.
In short no. This is Ballmer grasping at straws, throwing pennies at a problem that needs millions.
Matt Burns: Microsoft is losing two high-profile executives. Both J. Allard, “Chief Experience Offer” and Entertainment and Device Division’s CTO, and Robbie Bach, President of Entertainment and Devices Division, are leaving the company per a Steve Ballmer email from this morning. These are the guys behind the Xbox, Zune, Project Natal, and the dead Courier…
Matt Burns:
Microsoft is losing two high-profile executives. Both J. Allard, “Chief Experience Offer” and Entertainment and Device Division’s CTO, and Robbie Bach, President of Entertainment and Devices Division, are leaving the company per a Steve Ballmer email from this morning. These are the guys behind the Xbox, Zune, Project Natal, and the dead Courier project — so basically all of Microsoft’s hit entertainment projects from the last decade.
Not good for Microsoft at all, and indicative of the overall problem at Microsoft.
Edward Wyatt reporting: “The F.C.C.’s legal authority should be decided by the Congress itself, and not by applying to the Internet a set of onerous rules designed for a different technology, a different situation, and a different era,” he said [James Cicconi]. They need to give the control to the FCC, they need to have…
Edward Wyatt reporting:
“The F.C.C.’s legal authority should be decided by the Congress itself, and not by applying to the Internet a set of onerous rules designed for a different technology, a different situation, and a different era,” he said [James Cicconi].
They need to give the control to the FCC, they need to have done it yesterday.
Charlie Sorrel: As of today, AT&T customers can grab free Wi-Fi when not buying helium balloons or miniature Empire State Buildings. This, we presume, is a way to improve the telco’s notoriously bad data performance in several metropolitan centers. I am kinda (not really) surprised that it took them this long to try filling in…
Charlie Sorrel:
As of today, AT&T customers can grab free Wi-Fi when not buying helium balloons or miniature Empire State Buildings. This, we presume, is a way to improve the telco’s notoriously bad data performance in several metropolitan centers.
I am kinda (not really) surprised that it took them this long to try filling in with Wi-Fi.