Showing posts with label google-interest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google-interest. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Facebook Announces New Features



Facebook Announces New Features : Facebook helps you connect and share with friends. Register today!
San Francisco, July 1: Facebook is a bit worried about their future after the announcement of Google's brand new social networking site dubbed as "Google + '? Various media reported that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and a CEO discussed the "critical" situation with colleagues and plans to "start something great" in the coming weeks.


Mark Zuckerberg on Thursday, June 30 said that his company will add some new features to the Facebook platform, but the world's youngest billionaire refused to comment on the new features.

It is expected that Facebook could announce new features for the mobile platform and shelf. Previously, we reported that Facebook plans to launch an exclusive application for Apple iPad. A report in the Los Angeles Times said that Facebook is also planning to launch a photo sharing application for the Apple iPhone.

"We work on a number of exciting things we have not yet announced, but stay tuned for next week," the report quotes the Director of Engineering Facebook, Andrew Bosworth, as saying.

It would not be surprising if Facebook reveal some new security features. Currently, Facebook is facing criticism for its loop holes in security features. At the same time, the recent announcement of Google + is promising that the best features Facebook.

Unlike Facebook, Google + Circles to help users create a specific group with members selected the messages and links in this group will be available to members only. + Google has not yet rolled to the public, but he managed to create a huge buzz in the market





Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Apple Stock Falls After Jobs Announcement







Apple Stock Falls After Jobs Announcement :  Apple's shares are getting hit hard after-hours trading after theannouncement that CEO Steve Jobs, has resigned.



Steve Jobs at D8 ​​| Photo Åsa Mathat
Jobs, which will become chairman, is handing over the dailyactivities in the former COO, Tim Cook, who has skillfully servedthe company until Jobs was absent.

Still, investors are clearly unpleasant top-level change, although ithas been possible for quite some time.
At one point, shares traded down to $ 20.19, or 5.37 percent, $ 355.99. That means roughly $ 18.5 billion in market value.



Investors who have shares in Apple's recently introduced high enough to a telephone and a computer-maker passes Exxon Mobil recently the world's most valuable company, clearly placesthe overwhelming value of the job.

Stock was recently trading higher on the expectation that the iPhone launch in October 5.
This is not the first time that Jobs, a sudden departure has shaken investors' nerves.
Back in January 2009, the share fell as much as 10 percent, or about $ 6 billion market value, when the news broke that theCEO took a medical leave of absence.

All Things D's John Paczkowski called the investors' timewusses. "Yes, Jobs, Apple's sensitivity to penetrate the culture and its products, but that culture, and these products are not tethered to his health or the daily presence of the company. AndApple's deep executive bench is more than able to use it - and running it well - in his absence. .. . Apple-resistant - with or without Steve Jobs. "



Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Google's Real Names Policy Is Evil

 Google's Real Names Policy Is Evil

Google's horrible new policy on using real names in Google+ effectively means that the service is now a danger to real people. You have to ask yourself why a company that pledged to not be evil would do this.
Google has said that if you don't "use your full first and last name in a single language" you're in violation of it's terms of service. If it flags you, you'll have four days to change it or it'll boot your ass. You can't use initials (even that's what you go by). You can't use a pseudonym (even if that's what you go by). And you can't use numbers or symbols (even if they are part of your name).

Æ, e.e. cummings, Malcolm X, and T.S. Eliot would all be in violation of Google's policy. So, too (by my reading) would be Mark Twain, George Eliot and doubly so, R.U. Sirius. I'm pretty sure nobody whose name you actually know in the band U2 can use Google+ or, by extension, Gmail.

It's hard to understand why Google would embark on such a wrong-headed policy. The most likely answer is that this is a pure identity play. Forget social networking, the big goldmine of the future is online identity verification. This could be Google prioritizing getting ahead in that race over its users' preferences and safety.
In other words, it's Google putting money and greed over humanity. It's Google being evil.

Last week, Danah Boyd very eloquently laid out the case against a real names requirement. In short, if you don't let people use pseudonyms online, you're putting people in danger. Real, physical, danger.

Let's say you are a gay teen considering suicide who wants to reach out online without fear of your family finding out. Or maybe you are a whistleblower who fears retribution. Or a person of faith who could be subject to religious persecution. Or a dissident who fears imprisonment. A battered wife seeking shelter.
Or maybe you're somebody whose actual real name violates Google's policy. For example, it doesn't allow any numbers or symbols. So, sorry, Jennifer 8. Lee. I know you're a highly-respected and well-known journalist, but your name has a number in it so you've got four days to change that or you can fuck off back to Facebook.

And I don't know what the heck Prince is going to do about this.
The easy answer, of course, is simply to not use Google+. And I'm quite sure some people will posit that as a solution. But there are two reasons that's not the answer.

First, Google is too big and too important. As goes Google so goes the Web. It is one of a handful of companies that has real power and influence, capable of changing the status quo all on its own. If this becomes Google's universal policy, soon it will be that of the Internet itself.

Second, and this is related to the first, is that Google+ is a community. And we as a society we have a duty to work to make our communities free and open. We have a duty to change what is wrong, rather than to simply say "move along." Imagine, for example, if instead of working to change civil rights laws in the American South, the freedom riders had just offered one-way bus tickets to Massachusetts. If you don't like it in Birmingham, you should just move to Boston.

Google is one of the largest companies in the world, it touches billions of people. Governments regularly subpoena data from it. The things it knows about you matter. A lot.
Of course, Google does make it easy to quit Plus. It does offer a data liberation service that lets you take everything you've done on Google+ and put it on your hard drive.

Yet while it's admirable that Google is offering ways to liberate data, it also ought to be offering to liberate its users from fear of persecution. Sadly, right now, it's doing just the opposite.

Content Source  : http://www.maximumpc.com/article/features/googles_real_names_policy_evil

What is Google Plus?


  What is Google Plus?

Google finally announced Google+, its next effort in social.  Basically, Google+ is an amalgamation of several services we already use. The idea, according to Google, is to do them better.  Just when you thought you had a handle on your social media channels – another new service is created. Google is about to launch Google+ – their latest foray into the “social space.”  As their blog notes,



Google+  is designed to “bring the nuance and richness of real-life sharing to software.” But you don't need to worry about getting up to speed too fast, since the Google+ Project is still in the “limited field trial” stage.  Even though Google+ is still in the “project” stage, there’s been a lot of buzz in the non-profit blogosphere about whether  Google Plus will fly and whether or not it is a good fit for non-profits.  If you want to check it out for yourself, you can take the demo tour,  like I did, or you can check out what some of the well-known bloggers’ first-blush opinions and overviews of Google+

Sign up Here And Enjoy The Social Media Community : https://plus.google.com/
 
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