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- Provided by: mashable.com1362012-05-19 18:10:50
web and programming / mashable.com / - Twitter users who participated in a crowdsourced prediction for Facebook’s IPO day closing price collectively missed the mark, but another…
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- Provided by: techcrunch.com1372012-05-19 17:17:58
web and programming / techcrunch.com / - MICHAEL DAVID CRAWFORD and ORION BLASTAR Plaintiffs, v. GOOGLE, INC. Defendant. COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY AND INJUNCTIVE RELEASE. TechCrunch is a group-edited blog that profiles the companies, products and events defining and transforming the new web.
The anticipation is palpable.
Hundreds of hackers have congregated outside Manhattan's Pier 94, planning, strategizing, and praying to baby Jesus that their fates will be similar to those of Group.me and Docracy. We've seen plenty of Hackathon wnners go on to do incredible things, make millions of dollars, and rise to startup stardom levels, but the journey isn't a simple one.
Let me paint a little word picture of what this is sure to look like:
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- Provided by: gigaomnetwork.com1381970-01-01 00:00:00
web and programming / gigaomnetwork.com / 
Downloadable off-road racer Mad Riders will launch for PC, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 on 30th May, publisher Ubisoft has announced.
Mad Riders will be available for 800 Microsoft Points on Xbox Live Arcade and The latest stories from across the GigaOM Network Preserving consumer trust gets a lot of lip service. But a new report from the World Economic Forum actually attempts to translate its value into dollars and cents.

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- Provided by: readwriteweb.com1392012-05-19 18:00:00
web and programming / readwriteweb.com /
Google unveiled the Knowledge Graph. SlideShark makes giving presentations via your iPad easy peasy. Learn more about these stories and many more in the ReadWriteWeb Weekly Wrap-up.
After the jump you'll find more of this week's top news stories on some of the key topics that are shaping the Web - Location, App Stores and Real-Time Web - plus highlights from some of our six channels. Read on for more.

Google Goes Back to What It Does Well: Finding Things
Google released the Knowledge Graph this week and Jon Mitchell explains the ins and outs:
In the new Google, with the Knowledge Graph online, a new box will come up. You'll still get the Google results you're used to, including the box scores for the team Google thinks you're looking for, but on the right side, a box called "See results about" will show brief descriptions for the Los Angeles Kings, the Sacramento Kings, and the TV series, Kings. If you need to clarify, click the one you're looking for, and Google will refine your search query for you.
Learn more about how this will affect your search experience by reading Jon Mitchell's Google Goes Back to What It Does Well: Finding Things.
Giving iPad PowerPoint Presentations Just Got a Lot Better
If you've ever tried to give a presentation with your iPad, you know it's virtually impossible if you want to use presenter mode. That all changed with the recent release of SlideShark. Get a good look at the app by reading David Strom's review of the presentation app, SlideShark.
More Top Stories
![[Infographic] Taking HTML5 to the Next Level for Mobile](http://www.readwriteweb.com/files/styles/150_150/public/ringmark_150x150.jpg)
[Infographic] Taking HTML5 to the Next Level for Mobile
By 2013, there will be more than one billion HTML5-capable browsers in use throughout the world. Applications for those HTML5 browsers will be created by two million HTML Web developers, according to research from IDC. There is no question that HTML5 is going to be a major factor in mobile development during the next five to 10 years. The rise of HTML5 does not mean the death of native applications, but as the standard progresses, many developers will begin to incorporate more HTML5 into their apps than native code. More

Study: Facebook Timeline Improves Fan Engagement For Brands
Facebook posts by brands live longer on Timeline than they did prior to the social network’s massive overhaul, according to a study released Monday. While the analysis by London-based social media analytics firm Sotrender is limited in scope, covering just 130 brands headquartered in the U.K. and 5,000 posts, it is the first such empirical review since Timeline became mandatory for all Facebook brand pages at the end of March. More

Computer Programming for All: A New Standard of Literacy
Everyone ought to be able to read and write; few people within the global mainstream would argue with that statement. But should everyone be able to program computers? The question is becoming critically important as digital technology plays an ever more central role in daily life. The movement to make code literacy a basic tenet of education is gaining momentum, and its success or failure will have a huge impact on our society. More

What Is the Point of: #Hashtags?
Whenever a new Web trend comes along, there are people who ask, "What is the point of this?" If millions of people are using something, there has to be a reason. In our "What Is the Point of..." series, we'll explain it to you. This week, we're asking, What is the point of #hashtags? More

Staying Off Facebook Won't Protect Your Privacy
Stay away from social networks and people won't know who you're hanging out with or what you're doing, right? Wrong. When it comes to social networking, a recent study suggests, you can run but you can't hide. More

A Discreet Guide to Using Mobile Devices in the Loo
Last year, British researchers swabbed 390 cell phones and analyzed what they picked up. Know what they found? One in six phones has poop on it. Four out of five are contaminated by some kind of bacteria. Sure, we all like to make our own calls while answering Mother Nature's, but that's just gross. Here’s a surefire way to avoid a crappy user experience on your smartphone or other mobile device. More

How and Why Your Startup Should Go Virtual
Working virtually sounds like heaven to many startups. After all, not having a central office staffed with employees saves money on rent, utilities, parking, etc., freeing you to invest in research, development or marketing. On the other hand, operating virtually is no panacea. Before you make the virtual leap, you need to figure out exactly what working virtually means to your business. More
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- Provided by: mashable.com1401970-01-01 00:00:00
web and programming / mashable.com / - Image: http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5447/7224249964_7ddefc0c88.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/emabulator/7224249964/sizes/l/in/photostream/) Team17 has announced that their upcoming release of Worms Revolution (https://www.facebook.com/WormsTeam17) will expand on its gameplay with the... Founded in July 2005, Mashable is the world's largest blog focused exclusively on Web 2.0 and Social Media news. Mashable is the most prolific blog reviewing new Web sites and services, publishing breaking news on what's new on the web and offering social media resources and guides. Twitter users who participated in a crowdsourced prediction for Facebook’s IPO day closing price collectively missed the mark, but another…
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- Provided by: ajaxian.com1411970-01-01 00:00:00
web and programming / ajaxian.com / - Image: http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5447/7224249964_7ddefc0c88.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/emabulator/7224249964/sizes/l/in/photostream/) Team17 has announced that their upcoming release of Worms Revolution (https://www.facebook.com/WormsTeam17) will expand on its gameplay with the... Cleaning up the web with Ajax With the debut of Vert.x, the asynchronous framework is reaching an inflection point, suggests Andrew Cholakian. With Vert.x, the software is packaged together in such a way as to be extremely practical, he states. For some JVM zealots, Vert.x may meet needs recently and apparently addressed by node.js. Vert.x is an asynchronous application server – Read the rest...
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- Provided by: techcrunch.com1421970-01-01 00:00:00
web and programming / techcrunch.com / - An error was ecnountered attempting to get the RSS data: The server did not return XML. The content type returned was text/html; charset=UTF-8
An error was ecnountered attempting to get the RSS data: The server did not return XML. The content type returned was text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
TechCrunch is a group-edited blog that profiles the companies, products and events defining and transforming the new web.
The anticipation is palpable.
Hundreds of hackers have congregated outside Manhattan's Pier 94, planning, strategizing, and praying to baby Jesus that their fates will be similar to those of Group.me and Docracy. We've seen plenty of Hackathon wnners go on to do incredible things, make millions of dollars, and rise to startup stardom levels, but the journey isn't a simple one.
Let me paint a little word picture of what this is sure to look like:
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- Provided by: mashable.com1432012-05-19 17:28:57
web and programming / mashable.com / - There are many stories of hot startups raising killer seed rounds, and it can feel like money is flowing everywhere. Times might be good right now,…
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- Provided by: web20show.com1441970-01-01 00:00:00
web and programming / web20show.com / - More casting is being announced out of the Cannes Film Festival today as sales and financing company The Solution Entertainment Group has announced that British comic actor Simon Pegg has been cast in the lead role of Peter Chelsom's dramatic comedy Hector and the Search for Happiness . Based on the bestselling novel by FranFounders Talk is an interview podcast profiling founders building businesses both online and offline. Hosted by Adam Stacoviak. Steve Espinosa, the Founder of AppStack, joins Adam Stacoviak to tell his story of hustling his way to the top, gaining the trust and friendship of Jason Calacanis, Dave McClure, Eric Schmidt and the awesome team behind Google Ventures, what it means to focus and much more. This is a jam packed episode with tons of energy and lots to learn from Steve. Also, check out "After Dark" for an extended chat with Steve.
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- Provided by: alistapart.com1452012-05-19 00:28:37
web and programming / alistapart.com / - Image: http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5447/7224249964_7ddefc0c88.jpg (http://www.flickr.com/photos/emabulator/7224249964/sizes/l/in/photostream/) Team17 has announced that their upcoming release of Worms Revolution (https://www.facebook.com/WormsTeam17) will expand on its gameplay with the... Responsible responsive design demands responsive images—images whose dimensions and file size suit the viewport and bandwidth of the receiving device. As HTML provides no standard element to achieve this purpose, serving responsive images has meant using JavaScript trickery, and accepting that your solution will fail for some users. Then a few months ago, in response to an article here, a W3C Responsive Images Community Group formed—and proposed a simple-to-understand HTML picture element capable of serving responsive images. The group even delivered picture functionality to older browsers via two polyfills: namely, Scott Jehl’s Picturefill and Abban Dunne’s jQuery Picture. The WHATWG has responded by ignoring the community’s work on the picture element, and proposing a more complicated img set element. Which proposed standard is better, and for whom? Which will win? And what can you do to help avert an “us versus them” crisis that could hurt end-users and turn developers off to the standards process? ALA’s own Mat Marquis explains the ins and outs of responsive images and web standards at the turning point.
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- Provided by: bokardo.com1461970-01-01 00:00:00
web and programming / bokardo.com / - More casting is being announced out of the Cannes Film Festival today as sales and financing company The Solution Entertainment Group has announced that British comic actor Simon Pegg has been cast in the lead role of Peter Chelsom's dramatic comedy Hector and the Search for Happiness . Based on the bestselling novel by FranAn error was ecnountered attempting to get the RSS data: The server did not return XML. The content type returned was text/html Interface Design & UX by Joshua Porter I’ve just published a new resource that I hope is useful: Principles of User Interface Design. It contains a list of 20 or so design principles that I refer to all the time. This was a good way to get them down into one spot…so I can point people there in the future. You’ll also [...]
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- Provided by: techcrunch.com1472012-05-19 17:00:17
web and programming / techcrunch.com /
The Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, John Taschek, Gabe Rivera, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor — play toe jam football in the shadow of the Facebook IPO. Try as we might, we can't shake the weight of Facebook's dominance of Techmeme and maybe the fate of the global economy. Greece, move over. @gaberivera joins near the 30 minute mark.
@scobleizer tries a reverse Statue of Liberty play around the forthcoming Samsung phone and the threat to Apple (nonexistent) but our hearts aren't in it. I fail in a weak attempt to roll up everything under push notification. Face it: our hopes and dreams are now tied to our jobs as feeders of the Facebook Empire Please Twitter. Save us.
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- Provided by: techcrunch.com1482012-05-19 17:17:58
web and programming / techcrunch.com /
The anticipation is palpable.
Hundreds of hackers have congregated outside Manhattan's Pier 94, planning, strategizing, and praying to baby Jesus that their fates will be similar to those of Group.me and Docracy. We've seen plenty of Hackathon wnners go on to do incredible things, make millions of dollars, and rise to startup stardom levels, but the journey isn't a simple one.
Let me paint a little word picture of what this is sure to look like:
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- Provided by: micropersuasion.com1492011-06-28 18:11:00
web and programming / micropersuasion.com / - ¶ Google Social Network Nears, Aims to Preserve the Searchable Web:
“Google’s long expected second shot at taking on Facebook in the social networking space has arrived in the form of the Google Project. It has some interesting twists on the social networking model but is far from a Facebook-killer.”
The preview site is live here. At first glance it looks promising, but time will tell. Circles in particular seems like it may encourage people to get closer to those they care about most and leave the rest.
There’s a bigger story here, however, that the Times nails. This project is critical to Google because, between an Internet of apps and an Internet dominated by Facebook, the searchable web is slowly evaporating - and thus so could Google’s cash cow, eg ads.
“At stake is Google’s status as the most popular entry point to the Web. When people post on Facebook, which is mostly off-limits to search engines, Google loses valuable information that could benefit its Web search, advertising and other products.”
A Hail Mary? It may seem far-fetched that the web could erode, but remember that Google rose to prominence in a different time. They came of age in an era where the open web reigned. Now, however, with more traffic taking place inside walled gardens like mobile apps and Facebook, that same premise does not ring as true as it once did.
So that’s why, above all, they need a competitive play in social networking and why they’re leveraging the formidable social network they are sitting on, Gmail, to make their own play. This at first glance seems less about finding new ad revenue streams as it does about preserving what they have. It’s a preemptive strike.
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- Provided by: micropersuasion.com1502011-06-28 18:48:00
web and programming / micropersuasion.com / - Google's "What do you Love?":
Great new site from Google that helps you track any topic in one place.
