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From: zax4/24/2012 9:10:44 AM
   of 1272
 
Facebook for Windows Phone version 2.5 update coming soon

liveside.net 

The Facebook for Windows Phone app only just received an overhaul back in February, and today over at the official Facebook for Windows Phone page the team responsible for developing the app had shared a post revealing what’s coming in the next update – version 2.5. The team mentioned that the new features and improvements are based on customer’s feedbacks on Facebook, email, and reviews in the Windows Phone marketplace. Below is a list of what’s coming in this update:
  • Threaded messaging – Full Facebook threaded messaging including group messaging, all in a beautiful Metro style design.
  • Tagging – Now you can tag friends and locations in your posts in the ‘with’ and ‘at’ format.
  • Delete posts and comments – Use the tap and hold context menu to delete posts and comments from your wall.
  • Active links in posts – Tap on links in posts to go directly to the content.
  • Updates to the photo comments and likes page – The photo comments and likes page has been updated to match the posts comments and likes page. You can see a hint of the image at the top of the page, pull down and you can see the whole thing.
  • Ability to ‘Like’ comments – And finally, by popular demand…you can now ‘like’ comments!
The app is currently going through final stages of testing and submission, and the team expects to see the app available on the Windows Phone marketplace very soon. Stay tuned and we’ll let you know as soon as the app becomes available!


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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (251)4/24/2012 11:19:26 AM
From: richardred   of 1272
 
>I have vivid memories of the Netscape IPO.

I sure do to, Glen. I didn't buy it at the IPO, but a little later. My shares were eventually exchanged for AOL stock. I rode the wave of AOL and exited at an opportune time.

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To: richardred who wrote (253)4/24/2012 11:59:24 AM
From: richardred   of 1272
 
I also remember APPL's & Genentech's IPO real well. (highly touted like Facebook is now). I bought neither at their IPO. Yeah, I sold my Apple for 35 dollar a share way back, but make a small profit. I've stayed away ever since. Who would have known. I could have had a 500 dollar company today. <G> I made out much better on DNA.

Marc is one to keep an eye on. I think market valuations of many IPO's are way out of line. Just like the valuations of many NFL players. I however believe they should sell and get whatever the market takes. Eventually the price adjusts . I believe the same principle applies to NFL players.

Look what happen to Boston Market down the road. However, I believe Google IPO ers made out real well on a buy and hold.


Will the Bears buy stock in Matt Forte?<g>

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (251)4/24/2012 1:53:15 PM
From: zax1 Recommendation   of 1272
 
Facebook IPO Could Be Delayed by Deals, Distractions
Published: Tuesday, 24 Apr 2012 | 1:20 PM ET

cnbc.com 

By: Kate Kelly
CNBC Reporter

    Less than two weeks before the potential launch of Facebook’s initial public offering roadshow, a string of acquisitions and other business distractions are threatening to delay the sale, say people familiar with the matter.


    Getty Images



    Facebook management has been eyeing a May offering, with a roadshow launch as early as May 7 and the start of trading late the week of the 14th, people with knowledge of the deal have said. But in recent weeks, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been more focused on running the business and making acquisitions than on preparing for the share sale, according to one of these people, making it hard for him and other managers to focus wholeheartedly on the IPO preparations.

    As a result of that, Facebook is more likely to launch its roadshow on May 14, or even as late as the very end of May, say the people familiar with the matter. That is a start date that would likely delay the initial trading until early or mid-June. That’s because the Memorial Day holiday, which is May 28, will likely mean that the stock market is less liquid, and therefore less hospitable, to a new issue like Facebook for several trading days late in May, making it a bad time to be on the road or to launch trading.



    Effectively, says one person familiar with the matter, Facebook is looking at a “Plan A, B, C, and a D” for its IPO.

    A Facebook spokesman declined to comment on the expected timing of the deal.

    Having a CEO like Zuckerberg whose bias is to hunker down and do his job rather than fixating on potential stock prices and investors may be more an asset than a liability. However, Zuckerberg’s surprise decisions to buy Instagram for $1 billion over the course of a weekend and a $550 million patent portfolio from Microsoft have created the need for additional financial disclosures with the SEC, say lawyers and other people familiar with the matter, and answering all the Commission’s questions could take additional time.

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    To: zax who wrote (255)4/24/2012 5:31:44 PM
    From: Win-Lose-Draw1 Recommendation   of 1272
     
    Sounds like 19 kinds of "something going on".

    Spidey sense activated...

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    From: zax4/24/2012 6:22:09 PM
       of 1272
     
    Facebook deals may add week to IPO timing: source



    The Facebook logo is shown at Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, California May 26, 2010.
    Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

    By Alistair Barr

    reuters.com 

    SAN FRANCISCO | Tue Apr 24, 2012 4:07pm EDT

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A recent acquisition spurt by Facebook Inc may add about a week to the social network's journey to public markets, a source familiar with the situation said on Tuesday.

    Facebook recently agreed to buy photo-sharing start-up Instagram for about $1 billion and on Monday the company said it would pay $550 million for hundreds of patents from Microsoft Corp.

    The deals came weeks before Facebook was expected to enter the final stages of what will likely be the largest Silicon Valley initial public offering ever. The company has been aiming for an IPO sometime in May, with a roadshow typically taking about two weeks before the stock market debut.

    Facebook's recent acquisitions will likely add about a week to the timetable because the company will have to discuss the impact of these events with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the source said.

    The deals are likely not material, which means Facebook will probably not have to answer SEC questions through a new regulatory filing, which would have taken more time, the source added. The person did not want to be identified because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the IPO.

    A spokesman for Facebook declined to comment.

    An SEC spokeswoman declined to comment. The SEC's Corporation Finance division is currently reviewing Facebook's IPO filing and the regulator must declare the document effective before Facebook may begin selling shares.

    Facebook management was aiming to launch a roadshow as early as May 7 and the start of trading late the week of May 14. But now Facebook is more likely to start the roadshow May 14, or even at the end of that month, CNBC reported earlier on Tuesday.

    That would likely delay Facebook's stock market debut until early or mid-June. That is because the Memorial Day holiday, which is May 28, will likely mean that the stock market is less liquid and less hospitable to a new issue like Facebook, CNBC said.

    (Reporting By Alistair Barr; editing by Gunna Dickson)

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    To: zax who wrote (257)4/24/2012 6:32:02 PM
    From: Glenn Petersen   of 1272
     
    I am not concerned about the delay. Summary details for the two acquisitions were disclosed in the last amendment. The SEC may want FB to expand the disclosures. There does not appear to be anything complicated about the Instagram acquisition. The acquisition of the patents may be a bit more complicated, particularly because it may impact the litigation.

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    To: zax who wrote (246)4/25/2012 12:12:19 AM
    From: Glenn Petersen1 Recommendation   of 1272
     
    Re: The coolest thing about the MS sale of AOL's Netscape patents to fb, is that they are now in the loving arms of their original owner... Marc Andreesen

    Some perspective for those with short memories:

    Facebook Reunites Netscape and Marc Andreessen

    By David Benoit
    Wall Street Journal
    April 23, 2012, 6:20 PM

    Netscape, long ago lost in AOL’s sea, is back in familiar territory.

    The defunct web-browsing pioneer’s patents are among those purchased today by Facebook, after they spent a two week pit-stop at Netscape nemesis Microsoft.

    That Microsoft bought the shell of Netscape when it purchased 800 patents from AOL was weird enough. Netscape was the biggest fly in Microsoft’s eye during its anti-trust battles.

    But now that Facebook has bought the patents, they are back near the safe hands of Marc Andreessen’s, the co-founder of Netscape.

    Andreessen made his fortune on Netscape and is now a dean among the young pups of the Tech 2.0 rise, most notably Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. The venture capitalist has been on Facebook’s board since 2008 and his fund, Andreessen Horowitz, is in for a windfall from the upcoming Facebook IPO.

    AOL scooped up Netscape in 1998 for about $4 billion. In an odd parallel to Facebook’s deal today, in 1998 it was AOL who looked to be the future and was scooping up the remains of a fallen pioneer. (WSJ referred to AOL as the “ Ascendant AOL” at the time.)

    Netscape — or at least its remnants — isn’t the only company with an Andreessen connection to come under Facebook’s control recently.

    Andreessen will be getting additional shares of Facebook as part of the company’s $1 billion purchase of Instagram, which Andreessen Horowitz had invested in. Andreessen already owned some 6.6 million class B shares of Facebook and a footnote in Facebook’s filing today mentions that doesn’t include his portion of Instagram’s 23 million Facebook shares.

    blogs.wsj.com 

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    To: J.F. Sebastian who wrote (249)4/25/2012 11:33:39 AM
    From: richieb   of 1272
     
    No worries JF ... we all make errors. cheers :)

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    From: FUBHO4/25/2012 3:53:02 PM
    2 Recommendations   of 1272
     




    Posted on Tue, Apr. 24, 2012
    In Cuba, young people long for a way to access FacebookBy Franco Ordonez
    McClatchy Newspapers

    miamiherald.com 


    The 24-year-old volunteer shows off the seven computers sitting on wooden desks under a painting of Saint Juan Bosco in a small, 6- by 10-foot cement room at the back of the church.Adalberto Malagon has taken several classes here. He learned how to write book reports on Word and crop photos using Photoshop. But what he really wants to learn is how to surf the Web.

    Like many young Cubans, Rojas is frustrated that he can’t access Facebook and Google like his peers around the world.

    “We’re ready,” he said. “We have so much culture and education in Cuba. There are many Third World countries with much less culture and education than Cuba that have had the Internet for many years.”

    That may not come for years. Cuba, with its authoritarian communist government in control of the Web, has the lowest Internet-penetration rate in the Western Hemisphere, with just 16 percent of its population online. Even earthquake ravaged Haiti, the hemisphere’s poorest country, has a higher percentage of its people on the Internet.

    In Cuba, only government officials and foreigners can set up the Internet in their homes, and the vast majority of Cubans can’t afford the fees charged at tourist hotels, where an hour of Internet equals about a quarter of the average Cuban’s monthly salary.

    “Think about it,” said David Gonzalez, 20, who sometimes sneaks onto the Internet at the hotel where his mother works. “For $5 an hour, it’s not worth it.”

    Since taking over the presidency from his ailing brother Fidel, Raul Castro has moved to liberalize the country’s economy. He’s slowly introducing modern technology. In 2008, islanders first received the right to have private cellphones.

    But the government has been more cautious with the World Wide Web. An undersea fiber-optic cable now connecting Cuba and Venezuela will increase the country’s bandwidth, but service has yet to begin.

    The Cuban government is concerned about the online potential for dissent and social mobilization, according to experts such as William LeoGrande, a Latin America specialist and dean of the American University School of Public Affairs in Washington.

    The government feels confident that it has control of the traditional dissident community, LeoGrande said, but it’s less familiar with the techniques of a new crop of younger dissidents who’ve been inspired by the revolutionaries who used social media to start anti-government movements across North Africa and the Middle East.

    The most famous Cuban blogger using social media to foment dissent is Yoani Sanchez, who publishes "Generation Y," which is translated into 16 languages. She sends out regular tweets about activism and her life on the island using text messaging from her cellphone. She has nearly 250,000 Twitter followers. She posts regularly each day.

    “It’s possible that I don’t get there, that I don’t have enough health or life, please tell the youth of the future that their irreverence is welcome,” she recently wrote on Twitter.

    Opponents call her a fraud and an agent in the United States’ political and economic war against Cuba.

    The greatest challenge bloggers like Sanchez face isn’t censorship, but getting online. Despite the restrictions, she and others bloggers are finding new ways to broadcast their reporting, by saving posts onto flash drives and sharing them to friends with access to the Internet.

    In 2007, Ramiro Valdes, then the interior minister, called the Internet “one of the mechanisms of global extermination,” but he added that it was necessary for continued economic development.

    “This concern is exactly why Alan Gross is sitting in prison,” LeoGrande said.

    Gross, an American from suburban Washington, was arrested and accused of being a spy two years ago for bringing satellite phones, laptops and Blackberry cellphones onto the island. Gross worked under the umbrella of a pro-democracy project of the State Department’s U.S. Agency for International Development. He said he was bringing the equipment to the island’s Jewish community, but he was accused of trying to subvert the government.

    The island does have a limited intranet service that is more widely available. Cubans can surf local sites and open email accounts.

    Yaremis Guerra, 18, takes classes twice a week at the Youth Computer Club near her home outside Havana, where she looks up music sites and exchanges emails with cousins in Texas.

    “I get lost in that world,” Guerra said.

    Jakeline Diaz, 25, has access to email through work at a local hospital near Pinar del Rio. But she really longs to get on Facebook. A colleague recently returned from a medical mission in Angola, where she had access to the Web and created a Facebook page.

    “She has a lot of friends,” Diaz said. “She puts up photos. I’d love to have friends from around the world.”

    On a recent afternoon, Gonzalez was walking with two friends through Old Havana to watch a televised soccer match that he’d learned about on the Internet at his mother’s hotel. Since traveling outside the country isn’t an option, the Internet is the best way to learn about the outside world, he said. If you asked every young person, he said, they’d tell you their first or second desire is to be able to have more access to the Web.

    “No one has the Internet,” he said. “Not the young people. Not the old people. Really the only people who have the Internet are the people with power.”



    Read more here: miamiherald.com 



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