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Resources | ZDNet
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White papers, case studies, technical articles, and blog posts relating to your search
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Facebook acquires mobile social gifting startup Karma
Facebook has acquired social gifting startup Karma for an undisclosed sum. This is the first acquisition Menlo Park has made as a public company: the first of many to come, I'm sure.
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Stick a fork in the Facebook IPO, it's done
The hype is done. Reality is here. On its first day, Facebook's IPO had to be propped up by its underwriters to stay just barely above its offering price.
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Sapphire notebook: structured taking unstructured seriously
Historically SAP are an enterprise structured data software company: as society evolves unstructured data is ever more important. How are SAP coping with the opportunities and red herrings our...
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Facebook closes at $38 on day one
Facebook was priced at $38. On day one, the stock saw a high of $ 43.02, a low of $38, and ultimately finished at $38.37. Why didn't it fall below the $38 mark, even though it tanked twice?
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Zuckerberg: "Our mission isn't to be a public company" (video)
Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg made a short speech before he rang the Nasdaq bell remotely from his company's headquarters in Menlo Park. In short, he's happy, but not ecstatic.
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Oracle v. Google loses another juror; patent verdict looks distant
Verdict deliberations in Oracle v. Google have been mixed up as the jury looks like it might be stuck on the question of infringement once again.
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Microsoft eyes students, offers free Xbox with purchase of Windows PC
Microsoft's is once again offering students a free Xbox with the purchase of a qualifying Windows PC.
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Advertisements could soon be coming to the Kindle Fire
Amazon is mulling over the possibility of bringing its Kindle Special Offers program to the Kindle Fire -- but there are some concerns.
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How to succeed in the enterprise without really trying: Apple's crunch
Companies are now crawling with Apple sales representatives -- not paid representatives, but end-users.
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London police 'hack' suspects' phones: A major blow to human rights
London's police service will soon be allowed to 'hack' into phones of suspected criminals. This criminologist examines how dangerous this move is for ordinary citizens.
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