Friday, November 20, 2009
Microsoft, Nielsen Track Xbox Live Ads
These days, videogame platform makers often boast that they are also entertainment hubs.
These days, videogame platform makers often boast that they are also entertainment hubs.
Google Wave, the Internet giant’s new online collaboration tool, has generated much buzz among developers, and now it has a large geeky fan following doing strange and relatively useless things.
Putting content online is a risky game. You could win an audience measured in the millions and lose control of your work to pirates.
You would think that if anyone were making boatloads of money from Internet video, it would be high-traffic porn sites. You would be wrong.
For the second year in a row, Twitter has a major presence on Defcon’s Wall of Sheep.
A note of caution to online advertisers: That flood of Web users seemingly based in Vietnam may not simply be the result of a vibrant emerging economy coming online.
In the wake of the disputed Iranian election, American Internet companies including Facebook and Twitter have given Iranians an avenue to voice their opinions and to break through the wall of censorship their embattled government has built around the country’s traditional media.
A couple of weeks ago, the new Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust, Christine Varney, publicly repudiated a controversial report issued in the fall of 2008 by the Bush Justice Department.
High school hackers, crackers and digital deviants: Uncle Sam wants you.
“The cloud” has come to represent the bright future of computing, a world where processing and storage become as ubiquitous, cheap and accessible as electricity. But for big business, one researcher argues that “cloud” metaphor may be economically apt: The closer you look at the much-hyped technology’s price advantages, the fuzzier they seem.
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