Awesome!
Archives
All posts for the day May 23rd, 2012
KCCO!
KCCO!
lol đ
Busted! lol đ
KCCO!
Cha ching!
In the latest court filing in the ongoing Justice Department e-books price-fixing suit, Apple(s AAPL) said it did not conspire to fix the prices of digital books to hurt competitors and called the case âfundamentally flawed,â according to a Reuters report.
According to Reutersâ copy of the filing, Apple stated:
âAppleâs entry into e-book distribution is classic procompetitive conductâ that created competition where none existed, Apple said in its court papers.
âFor Apple to be subject to hindsight legal attack for a business strategy well-recognized as perfectly proper sends the wrong message to the market,â it added. âThe governmentâs complaint against Apple is fundamentally flawed as a matter of fact and law.â
Apple also denied that the government âaccurately characterizedâ the comment attributed to Jobs.
The âcomment attributed to Jobsâ is referring to a January 2010 email from Steve Jobs in which he seems to suggest how to setâŚ
View original post 116 more words
Page Bloat is a real problem… đ
The average web page is now more than 1 megabyte (MB). This isnât a case where bigger is better, itâs bad for site owners and for mobile users.
Back in December, I predicted that at some point in 2012 the average web page would surpass 1 MB in size. That point has arrived â a little earlier than even I expected. On May 1, the newest web page stats released by the HTTP Archive revealed that the average web page is now a whopping 1042 kilobytes (1024 kilobytes equals a megabyte).
Whatâs behind rampant page bloat?
To put things in perspective: at the time I made my prediction, the average page was 965 KB. Thatâs 8 percent growth in just four months. Doesnât sound like much? Then consider this: Back when the HTTP Archive started tracking page stats in November 2010, a mere 18 months ago, the average page wasâŚ
View original post 533 more words
Use it! đ
Why worry, when your a billionaire. lol đ
Facebook will more than likely shy away from hitting the âLikeâ button over the recent troubles they have had since the moment of their historic Initial Public Offering. The company closed with thirty eight dollars per share on Friday but the social networks record breaking hype was short lived.
To start off this week, Facebook shares were reported as down by thirteen percent plus another five percent, as of yesterday. The stock has once again risen by more than three percentas of today, shining a bit of light on the situation at hand.
For those who did not know, Facebook went public last friday for the largest internet IPO to date at roughly one hundred and four billion dollars. Since then the social networkâs stock has dropped close to three billion dollars, upsetting share holders and landing the company in some hot water.
However, Andrew Noyes, a FacebookâŚ
View original post 23 more words