| Wall Street Journal: |
Facebook Close to $38 IPO Price — Facebook Inc. is close to pricing its initial public offering at $38 a share, said a person familiar with the matter, a move that would value the Internet company at more than $100 billion. — Facebook executives and senior bankers on the deal were holed … | Business Week: |
How Mark Zuckerberg Hacked the Valley — In 2006, when he was 22, Mark Zuckerberg gave up writing computer code to focus on managing his rapidly growing startup. Like Jim Brown retiring from football at 29 or E.M. Forster abandoning the novel in his forties, the prodigy who programmed … | Cathy Avgiris / Comcast Voices: |
| Aaron Ricadela / Bloomberg: |
Hewlett-Packard Said to Consider Cutting as Many as 25,000 Jobs — Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) is considering cutting as many as 25,000 jobs, or 8 percent of its workforce, to reduce costs and help the company contend with ebbing demand for computers and services, people briefed on the plans said.| Julie Bort / Business Insider: |
Source: Layoffs Are About To Hit HP — It's no secret that HP is considering layoffs and soon. — Meg Whitman has even publicly hinted at them. Question is, how many employees will be axed? — One source at HP claims the job cuts are going to be massive.| Nick Bilton / Bits: |
Twitter Implements Do Not Track Privacy Option — It's no secret that Facebook is worth about $100 billion because it collected personal data about its users. A lot of data. — Although Twitter tracks its users too — albeit in a much less aggressive way — the company has decided to take a different route.| AllThingsD: |
Exclusive: Japan's Rakuten Wins the Heart of Pinterest in $100M Funding Race With $1.5B Valuation — Rakuten, the largest e-commerce site in Japan, is expected to be the lead investor in the much-contested next round of funding for Silicon Valley's hottest start-up, Pinterest.| Tim Bradshaw / FT Tech Blog: |
| Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch: |
Schumer And Casey's Ex-PATRIOT Act: Details Of How They Plan To Get Saverin's $67M And More — Charles Schumer and Bob Casey, the two U.S. Senators behind the Ex-PATRIOT act — a proposal to go after early Facebook backer Eduardo Saverin and others like him that have renounced U.S. citizenship … | Quentin Hardy / New York Times: |
| Evelyn M. Rusli / DealBook: |
| Nilay Patel / The Verge: |
HTC shipping custom Android builds on US devices to avoid Apple patents — The HTC One X for AT&T and Evo 4G LTE for Sprint already bear the distinction of being the first Android devices to face an import block at US Customs for potentially infringing an Apple patent, but the ignominy may be fleeting … | Emil Protalinski / ZDNet: |
The Pirate Bay returns, Anonymous hater takes credit for DDoS — Summary: The Pirate Bay is back online. An Anonymous traitor who goes by the name AnonNyre has claimed responsibility for the Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack that kept the site offline for days.| Matthew Braga / Ars Technica: |
Say hello to the real real-time Web — It's not just a buzzword, but a technological shift—the instantly accessible Web. — Real-time technologies are making Web apps faster—and in some cases, indistinguishable from desktop apps. — Garret Voight — It started with a simple idea … | Aamir Usman / Shoutpedia: |
Apple is Filtering “Jailbreak” Term in the US iTunes Store — Apple is reportedly filtering the “Jailbreak” term from the iTunes items. All the categories are affected with this filter including Apps, songs, albums, podcast episodes, and iTunes U episodes.| Ellen Nakashima / Washington Post: |
| Kim-Mai Cutler / TechCrunch: |
Eduardo Saverin Backs Mobile Wallet Contender Crowdmob — Eduardo Saverin may no longer be a U.S. citizen. But that's not stopping him from investing in American companies. — In fact, he just closed a deal. He's backing Crowdmob, a startup that's blending app promotion with discounts from local merchants.| Reuven Cohen / The Digital Provocator: |
Iran to Sue Google Over Dropping Persian Gulf Name From Map — In a move that shows just how powerful online mapping has become, the AP is reporting that Iran will sue Google over dropping the name of the Persian Gulf on GoogleMaps. The action comes after Google intentionally left the body … | Josh Lowensohn / CNET: |
Flashback makers missed out on their payday, Symantec says — The high-profile Flashback Trojan that is estimated to have infected more than 600,000 Macs at its peak earlier this year would have earned its creators $14,000 in the course of three weeks. — The only hitch is that the money isn't going anywhere.| Frederic Lardinois / TechCrunch: |
Bing Launches Its Paid Search API, But Will Still Offer A Free Tier — Just about a month ago, Microsoft announced that it would end free access to its Bing Search API and start charging a minimum of $40 per month for the service. Today, the company is officially launching the Bing Search API … | Kara Swisher / AllThingsD: |
Even as Settlement Hopes Appear, Facebook Blames Shoddy Checking in Answer to Yahoo Patent Fraud Claim — When last we tuned in to the ongoing drama that is the patent infringement lawsuit Yahoo aimed at Facebook, Yahoo had a CEO — Scott Thompson — who was full steam ahead in pressing the controversial legal action.| Ellis Hamburger / The Verge: |
Pipe: file sharing in the Facebook age is about to get real — The appeal of Pipe can't be witnessed on paper, but is instead evident in its visual simplicity. You drag a file from your desktop onto a Super Mario-esque green pipe on your screen and the file disappears … | Jon Fingas / Engadget: |
Plastic Logic shutters US offices, gets out of making its own e-readers — Plastic Logic has something of a rollercoaster history, having had to drop the QUE proReader before it even shipped and getting a $700 million cash injection that ultimately swung its attention to Russian schoolchildren.| Nathan Ingraham / The Verge: |
T-Mobile to launch new no-contract mobile broadband plans on May 20th — T-Mobile's making it easier for customers to use its growing HSPA+ network for mobile broadband by introducing some new, contract free plans. As of May 20th, T-Mobile will offer four new prepaid mobile broadband plans … | Josh Lowensohn / CNET: |
Retina MacBook screens: Already here — and pricey — A pixelated MacBook screen. — (Credit: CNET) — Apple is said to be on the verge of rolling out new high-resolution displays for its computers that, up until now, have only been available on its iPhones and iPads.
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Website traffic analytics: How to read your data and take action — Traffic is up. Sessions look healthy. The dashboard is full of green arrows and yet — conversions are flat, revenue targets are slipping, and the leads coming through aren't closing.
Protecting your Cloud Applications Data — Backing up Office 365, Google Workspace, Dropbox & Salesforce data is critical to preventing data loss or corruption, complying with laws and avoiding critical downtime in case of a disaster.
This is a Techmeme archive page. It shows how the site appeared at 2:55 PM ET, May 17, 2012.
The most current version of the site as always is available at our home page. To view an earlier snapshot click here and then modify the date indicated.
| Sinead Carew / Reuters: |
| Hyunhu Jang / The Verge: |
| Emil Protalinski / ZDNet: |
| Sean Gallagher / Ars Technica: |
| Antony Savvas / Computerworld UK Public Sector: |
| Rebecca Mackinnon / Foreign Policy: |
| Colleen Taylor / TechCrunch: |
| Meghan Kelly / VentureBeat: |
| Ki Mae Heussner / GigaOM: |
| Janko Roettgers / GigaOM: |
| Brian Ashcraft / Kotaku: |
| Janko Roettgers / GigaOM: |