Saturday, June 30, 2012

Startup Stages Flash Mob for Social Media Day [VIDEO]






Close to 500 people participated in a flash mob in New York City's Hudson River Park for Social Media Day.

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The performance was the brainchild of tech startup Urthecast, which . Surprised tourists waiting in line for Hudson River cruises were taken aback as the participants, clad in orange, ran to the boardwalk and started dancing.


"They were all volunteers," said Jill Lennox, communications manager of the Business Instincts Group, which helped organize the flash mob. "The Flash Mob of America coordinated it on Twitter and Meetup.com, and it spread by word of mouth."

[More from Mashable: ]


During the 11-minute dance, the performers formed themselves into several symbols, including the "@" sign, a hashtag and a heart, among others. The complete performance, which will include aerial footage from Urthecast, will be posted on on Thursday. A was held in San Francisco last April.


"The core of our platform is all about social media," Lennox explained. "We're doing a different twist on flash mobs -- something you can't fully see from the ground. That way, you can share it with friends and fully appreciate a different perspective."


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

50 Digital Media Resources You May Have Missed






Summer storms got you down? Have you forgotten how we used to pass the time before the days of , Netflix and Pinterest? Here's an idea: catch up on Mashable's features coverage from the last week and check out some resources you may have missed.

[More from Mashable: ]


Saturday marks the third annual -- so get in the spirit with stories on turning social media relationships into IRL ones, the state of social media in Europe and how the medium is impacting small communities.


Also be sure to check out our business coverage for hot tips on scoring those first 1,000 users, keeping an engaged audience online and mastering the art of Search Engine Optimization. Whether you work at a large company or are just sowing the roots of your start-up, we'll definitely have something to boost your productivity this week.

[More from Mashable: ]


And because we know you've been waiting for this with bated breath, we've rounded up six scented iPhone cases that are bound to tickle your senses. There's no need to say thank you — we do it because we care.


Editor's Picks




  • Here are five common errors that small businesses make when it comes to social media -- and how to avoid them.


  • With the help of some smart marketers and entrepreneurs, we're created a clear outline for attracting your startup's first 1,000 users.


  • Moms lead the pack when comes to liking brands on Facebook, according to a recent survey by Burst media.


  • Just like new computers come standard with Internet Explorer or iPhoto, iPhones contain in-house apps. Here are 10 alternatives to the norm.


  • The more users make the switch to Apple products, the more we can expect criminal malware to follow. Here's how to protect your Mac.


Social Media




  • It's not always easy to transition a social media acquaintance into a real-life friendship. Here are a few tools that can make that happen.


  • We love listening to music to start the day. For Music Monday we decided to share a Spotify playlist of our favorite commuting songs.


  • Which TV shows generate the most buzz on social networks? Find out each week from our social TV chart.


  • You can connect your Twitter feed to your home appliances by using simple hacks or splurging on an Internet-ready device.


  • Join our Google+ hangout on June 27 at 8:30 A.M. EST to discuss trends and the state of social media with social media influencers from Europe.


  • As we spend a bit of time chatting over on Skype, we thought we'd share some fun tips.


  • Reuters may have pulled the @ReutersHulk parody, but there are still plenty of Hulk-style accounts that are worth following on Twitter.


  • Some of the best inside jokes of the web quit before burning out. Here are 10 memorable Tumblr sites.


  • In light of Mashable's mission to celebrate the digital revolution, how social media impacts your local community.


  • Google+ came onto the social media scene a year ago. These 10 brands have used the platform to its fullest.


  • We found six figures in the gaming world you need to be following for hilarious updates and insider news about video games.


For more social media news and resources, you can follow Mashable's on and become a fan on .


Business & Marketing




  • Should you take your team to the park and to sporting events? Startups sound off.


  • We've been following Vungle for a couple months -- today we see their product go from alpha to beta.


  • Four successful entrepreneurs shared the mobile payment apps they use to conduct sales and business, especially when they're on the road.


  • This infographic reveals all you need to know to start building an engaged audience online.


  • No one understands more than engineers that complex workflows can be a real pain. Here are three productivity tools to counter that.


  • Companies are looking for new ways to break through the marketing clutter. One tactic is building a campaign around user-generated content.


  • Google has released a video that provides startups tips and suggestions about how to master search engine optimization in just 10 minutes.


  • Missed earlier episodes of 'Behind the Launch'? Catch up with our abridged version, then tune in to the finale.


  • Personal tasks that may have once been considered taboo are now acceptable practices at work today, according to a study by Mozy.


  • If you're getting your startup off the ground, you should recognize there are several options for how to structure your business.


  • A recent study reveals customers don't feel online retailers are providing sufficient customer service.


  • Here are three key methods for making your brand and its advertising something that can't be skipped or disrupted.


  • In the last episode of Behind the Launch, co-founders Zain and Jack reflect on the past few months and discuss Vungle's future.


  • As the November elections approach, politicians will likely focus on several key issues, including small business.


  • There are many opportunities for brands to “go native.” Here are five types of native advertising every brand marketer should consider.


  • The smartest brands are now putting music to work as part of their social marketing strategy. Here’s how it works.


  • Socialcam's tagline is "the easiest way to take and share videos," and these brands are taking note.


  • There are some basic best practices to keep in mind when coming up with how to market your business on the iPad. Here are five tips.


  • In just eight short years, 46% of the U.S. workforce will be comprised of millennials. This infographic shares how and why to manage them.


  • Push notifications, when done right, enable a brand to socialize with its most engaged customers anytime, anywhere. Here's how.


  • Users that activate Do Not Track may still be served targeted ads to prevent the same ad from appearing over and over.


For more business news and resources, you can follow Mashable's on and become a fan on .


Tech & Mobile




  • We've collected a selection of Google Maps that pinpoint the precise locations visited by some of the hottest characters on television.


  • We have found eight excellent covers that mean you can take your e-reader to the beach without fear of damage from sand or sea.


  • Today’s kids are part of the most connected generation ever, some having had cellphones and mobile gaming devices since grade school.


  • If you want to shift TV from your small-screen laptop to the giant flat-screen, there are alternatives to the cable box.


  • Both Google and Microsoft have dramatically overhauled the way each handles search over the past few months.


  • Square revolutionized ecommerce with their mobile credit card reader. Now PayPal wants to do the same with the PayPal Here mobile service.


  • Companies like Tesco and FreshDirect are reinventing the way we get our food.


  • Just when we thought phone accessories couldn’t get any wackier, we found these six scented iPhone cases.


  • Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon have packages with different Internet connections, so don't waste money on speed you don't need.


  • Security vulnerabilities and data retention policies have experts concerned about the privacy risks of our smartphone obsession.


  • Experts reveal commuter tech etiquette rules travelers should follow for more joyful experiences on the bus or tube.


  • These educational iPad and iPhone apps for kids in grade schoolers will keep your kids fresh for the new school year.


  • If you're feeling particularly patriotic this time of year, try these 10 tech accessories.


  • 5 applications and web platforms that are allowing individuals to call, text and email doctors when they need emergency medical advice.


  • Android 4.1 Jelly Bean brings with it voice search, but is it any match for Apple's Siri?


For more tech news and resources, you can follow Mashable's on and become a fan on .


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

Texting and Driving: A Crash Course [INFOGRAPHIC]





and driving a car at the same time is a dangerous and irresponsible combination -- but people do it anyway. A series of sparse, haunting public service ads from provides a that even sending or receiving short messages can lead to death or lifelong crippling injury.

The numbers back this up, too. Results vary, but some studies have found that upwards of 20% of all car accidents involve cellphone use of some kind. That can total more than a million collisions per year that might have been avoided without involved.

[More from Mashable: ]


A government report from 2009, meanwhile, found that texting makes a car crash a whopping 23 times more likely than if drivers were simply focused on the road.


Other studies have reported equally disturbing results, but states are fighting back by passing laws that prohibit talking and texting on cellphones while behind the wheel. Still, laws can only go so far and people continue to text and drive.

[More from Mashable: ]


The Internet education portal recently rounded up findings and reports from sources including the The Washington Post, the Governors Highway Safety Association, Virginia Tech University and others to produce the below. Check it out for a rundown on how much people text and drive, and let us know in the comments -- why do you think people continue doing something that clearly puts their own lives and those of others at serious risk?


Courtesy of:


Thumbnail image via iStockphoto,


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

Twitter Hashtag History Gets a Musical Tribute [VIDEO]






Here's a funky little piece of weekend edutainment: the history of the hashtag as performed by horn player and music video maker . Raps interspersed with jazzy trombone interludes tell how the now-ubiquitous number sign followed by letters went from a random nothing on the social network to something tweeters today rely on to spread important news, tell jokes and tell they world they're #winning.

[More from Mashable: ]


We haven't vigorously vetted Paul's history lesson, but it checks out against a quick web search.


If Paul the Trombonist looks familiar to you, it's because he's also the man behind " ," a viral hit from February about something most of us can related to. In interviewing Paul about that song, we also learned that he made a hypnotic last year.

[More from Mashable: ]


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

For Kristi Yamaguchi, Social Media Reshapes the Olympics





This summer's in London will be shaped by social media like no sporting event in history. But 20 years ago, when figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi took home the gold medal at the 1992 games in France, social media was an unheard of concept.

Yamaguchi became a household name and global celebrity. But without , and other platforms, that experience was much different for her than it will be for this summer's Olympic stars.

[More from Mashable: ]


"Social media has changed so much," Yamaguchi told Mashable in an interview. "It's incredible that you can actually send an athlete a message now. Whether they respond or not, who knows, but you can actually feel a little bit in common with them. In the past, you couldn't really reach out to celebrities at all."


Long since retired from skating, Yamaguchi now lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband and two daughters. Most of her time is devoted to her children's foundation. (She also won Dancing With the Stars in 2008.) But a couple of years ago, she says, she got as well -- first as way to follow volunteer organizations and breaking news, then as a prolific tweeter herself, posting about family life, health and sports.

[More from Mashable: ]


She says she'll be using Twitter to track the 2012 Olympics, and that gymnast and swimmer are two of her favorite follows. As a former Olympian, though, Yamaguchi is aware of the challenges that life in the always-on era of social media brings.


"Now you have to be smart about what you're putting out there, because once you do it's there forever," she says. "It's harder for young athletes to think about how it might affect them down the line or cause controversy, because people are very opinionated online and also braver to speak out online. You can't read everything that's there, because otherwise you'll just go crazy with the things people say about you."


So given the pros and cons, does Yamaguchi think she would have embraced Twitter the way she does now?


"If I was competing in this day and age, I would for sure be using it," she says. "Times have changed and people kind of want it and expect it now, but I would have loved to use it to reach out to fans."


Who are some former Olympians you wish had been on Twitter in their heyday? Let us know in the comments.


Thumbnail image courtesy


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

Website Posts Mug Shots, Then Offers to Delete Them For a Fee [VIDEO]







A new site aims to deter crime by publicizing arrests.

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Andrew Creed, 30, created BlabberMouthKC.com, where he posts the names, mug shots, and addresses of those arrested in Johnson County, Kan. after their release from jail.


For those who object to having their public record aggregated in such a way, Creed will remove the profiles from his site -- for a fee. Anyone who pays the fee and is subsequently found innocent will be refunded the money. Unsurprisingly, in Johnson County.

[More from Mashable: ]


See the video above for the full story.


Do you think Creed's business is legit, or should he be shut down? Share your opinion in the comments.


Thumbnail photo courtesy of ,


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

Eastern US storm hobbles Netflix and Instagram




NEW YORK (AP) — Netflix, Instagram and Pinterest are using Twitter and Facebook to update subscribers after violent storms across the eastern U.S. caused server outages for hours.

Netflix and Pinterest restored service by Saturday afternoon.

Instagram used its Facebook fan page to communicate with users of its photo-sharing service. It posted a message on Saturday morning that blamed the electrical storm for the outage and explained that its engineers were working to restore service.

Still, many Instagram's users were searching for answers. "Instagram" was the top search term on Google on Saturday, according to Google Trends.

Netflix, Pinterest and Instagram are customers of Amazon Inc.'s web services division. The unit provides web services and data storage facilities that are commonly used for "cloud computing".

Amazon spokeswoman Kay Kinton told The Associated Press in an email that the storm cut power to some of company's operations. Service has been restored for most customers, Kinton said.

Netflix, a video streaming service, said on Twitter that subscribers should reconnect if they still experienced problems.

The online scrapbook service Pinterest says employees are working to fix remaining issues that may affect performance.

The Friday evening storms knocked out power for millions of people.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Eastern US storm hobbles servers for 3 websites




NEW YORK (AP) — Netflix, Instagram and Pinterest are using Twitter and Facebook to update subscribers after violent storms across the eastern U.S. caused server outages for hours.

Netflix and Pinterest restored service by Saturday afternoon.

Instagram used its Facebook fan page to communicate with users of its photo-sharing service. It posted a message on Saturday morning that blamed the electrical storm for the outage and explained that its engineers were working to restore service.

Still, many Instagram's users were searching for answers. "Instagram" was the top search term on Google on Saturday, according to Google Trends.

Netflix, Pinterest and Instagram are customers of Amazon Inc.'s web services division. The unit provides web services and data storage facilities that are commonly used for "cloud computing".

Amazon spokeswoman Kay Kinton told The Associated Press in an email that the storm cut power to some of company's operations. Service has been restored for most customers, Kinton said.

Netflix, a video streaming service, said on Twitter that subscribers should reconnect if they still experienced problems.

The online scrapbook service Pinterest says employees are working to fix remaining issues that may affect performance.

The Friday evening storms are responsible for twelve deaths and knocked out power for millions of people.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Top 10 GIFs of the Week





Tearful Goodbye


After days of media speculation that Today show co-host Ann Curry would be stepping down from her role, the journalist on Thursday that it was her last day.

Rumors began circulating late last week that Curry was offered a $10 million deal to leave the company one year early of her two-year $20 million contract.

[More from Mashable: ]

The Internet had its fair share of viral GIFs this week, thanks in part to news that Ann Curry would be leaving the Today show after 15 years at NBC.

[More from Mashable: ]


Curry's tearful goodbye was made into a bevvy of GIFs, as well as one of new Today co-host Savannah Gutherie made its way around the Internet.


This week also brings a collection of furry creatures doing adorable things, so go on and finish off your week by perusing the gallery above.


SEE ALSO:


Which GIF gets your pick for the best of the week? Let us know in the comments.


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

In a Relationship: College Students and Their Smartphones [INFOGRAPHIC]





College students aren't just concerned with getting good grades and finding the best parties. More than ever, they're using their to navigate life on campus.

On the bus, waiting in line, in bed, on the treadmill and even while driving, college students can't seem to put their phones down. Fifty-two percent say they often check their phones before getting out of bed in the morning, according to one study. Nearly half do so while in bed at night before they fall asleep.

[More from Mashable: ]


Thirty-five percent say they sometimes use their phones while driving but stopped at a red light, and nearly 20% say they sometimes use them while the wheels are even moving. But it's not all addiction and danger. Forty-five percent of college students say smartphones frequently help with school assignments, and 46% say they're often helpful for work-related tasks.


The Internet education portal pulled this data and more from sources including the Pew Internet & American Life Project, University of Colorado and Nielsen to produce the below.

[More from Mashable: ]


Among other notable findings: More colleges students use than any other device, has nearly caught as the most popular use for smartphones among college students and nearly half of students use their phones to check the weather.


Check out the full infographic below for more information and let us know in the comments -- do you think smartphones are doing more to distract or help college students?



Thumbnail photo courtesy of ,


This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

Friday, June 29, 2012

South Carolina clamps down on municipal Wi-Fi menace






Ars Technica has a steller report on the South Carolina state legislature’s recent passage of a bill that “effectively makes it difficult, if not impossible” for town and city governments to create their own municipal Wi-Fi networks — networks that are aimed at giving citizens taxpayer-funded, free-to-use Internet service. The two big powers behind the legislation, Ars reports, were AT&T; and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a group that creates corporate-friendly model legislation for state legislators to pass. ALEC’s primary objection to municipal Wi-Fi, it seems, is that it might compete with private Wi-Fi services and put the squeeze on incumbent carriers’ profitability.


“If municipalities are inclined to pursue broadband initiatives then certain safeguards must be put in place in order to ensure that private providers, with whom the municipality will compete with, are not disadvantaged by the municipality in the exercise of its bonding and taxing authority, management of rights of way, assessment of fees or taxes, or in any other way,” the organization says in outlining its policy recommendations.


Jim Baller, a Washington, DC-based telecom lawyer, tells Ars that the South Carolina legislation is particularly restrictive of municipal Wi-Fi projects because “it does not grandfather existing projects and would retroactively undermine federal stimulus grants that Orangeburg and Oconee Counties have received.” Predictably, Ars notes that the bill’s author and many of its sponsors received donations from AT&T; last year.


Read


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Source & Image : Yahoo

Google+ creator: Don't call it a social network







The staffers behind Google+ say that it shouldn't be referred to as a social network.

The staffers behind Google+ say that it shouldn't be referred to as a social network.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS



  • Google+ creator says the site shouldn't be compared to Facebook and Twitter

  • Vic Gundotra says Google's social tool is meant to enhance other Google offerings

  • Video-chat Hangouts have been a highlight for Google+





(CNN) -- Google+ has a problem.

It's not engagement or the lack of a clear way to monetize itself. It's not those sometimes-unwieldy friend-organizing circles, or even the perception that no one other than nerds uses the service.

The problem, its creators believe, is that many people keep comparing it to Facebook -- or, more broadly, social networks. While social interaction is a key part of Google+, the project is much more ambitious. Google+ is nothing short of a wholesale upgrade to all of Google's products and services, but with the identity of the user incorporated.

Mashable sat down with Vic Gundotra, Google's senior vice president of social business, and Bradley Horowitz, Google+'s vice president of product, at the Google I/O developer conference. They were excited about the new Google+ features that were announced -- the Events feature and the new tablet app -- but they were also quick to downplay any comparisons to Facebook, or any suggestion that many people aren't interested in joining Google+.

"Google+ is just an upgrade to Google," says Gundotra. "People have a hard time understanding that. I think they like to compare us with other social competitors, and they see us through that lens instead of really seeing what's happening: Google is taking its amazing products, and by bringing them together, they just become more awesome."

Gundotra and others have said this before, and you get the sense that they really believe in their recipe for Kool-Aid. Google also released some new statistics to parry any stabs at accusing the network of not having a large and engaged audience -- 250 million total users, with 150 million of them visiting every month, and half of those people signing in every day (if you're doing the math, that's 75 million daily active Plussers).

Wading Into Google+'s Stream

But with the definition of Google+ so broad, what constitutes "active daily use" becomes a little hazy. If I'm signed into Google+ and simply do a Google search or upload a photo to Picasa, does that count? As Google defines the service, it would appear so.

However, a user performing such basic Google tasks may never visit the Stream, Google+'s main social feature. That brings the question: Just how engaged are Google's users with the Stream? This week at I/O, Gundotra revealed that "active" users of Google+ spend an average of 12 minutes in the stream, up from 9 minutes three months ago.

Still, that's not quite on par with Facebook, which sees its users spend a grand total of 10.5 billion total minutes spent on the network every day, according to its IPO filing. While that becomes about the same 12 minutes if you divide by Facebook's 900 million users, remember that we're talking about active users here, so Facebook's actual engagement is actually much higher.

So since this area is actually where the comparison to Facebook is valid, how can Google both increase the proportion of active users as well as boost engagement on the Stream?

"That's a fair question," says Gundotra. "I think there we boost engagement by giving people ways to connect things that they care about and are exciting — that nobody else has. Like Google hangouts. Like Events. Like beautiful photos."

Horowitz believes as more users "upgrade" to Google+ — which essentially just means letting Google know who you are — it'll become clear to them that Google's many services become much more useful. And at some point they'll find the Stream.

"When Google knows that I'm a man, and I live in this zip code, and I went to this school, and I have these interests, my entire experience gets better," he explains. "You will discover our engagement is massive, and guess what? Your friends, family and loved ones are already here. It's not as if we need to acquire users. We just need to bring them into the light."

Money Money Money

The way Horowitz and Gundotra describe it, upgrading to Google+ is almost a religious conversion: You weren't really living (i.e. using Google) until you make the transition. Still, Google is a business, and it doesn't undertake massive projects like Google+ without some kind of plan to monetize them.

So far, Google+ doesn't have anything like Twitter's trending topics (although it has a "What's Hot" stream that's a click or tap away for users) or Facebook's sponsored stories. When asked if we might someday see similar features introduced in Google+, Gundotra wouldn't say, but his change in manner betrays a disdain for how Google's competitors incorporate advertising.

"Our business model is very different," he says. Some of our competitors are like going to a baseball stadium. If you have 90,000 people there, you're going to put up ads everywhere, and that's basically the core business model. You're looking at a picture of your daughter, we're going to show you an ad.

"We have a very different philosophy. We think the right time to show and ad is when you are at the moment of commercial intent. When iIm doing a house remodel, and I'm looking for a microwave oven, then I see Bradley's +1 on a GE appliance, that means a lot more to me."

Gundotra repeated a statistic that Google has released before — that when brands use Google+'s social extensions in their ads, the click-through rate (CTR) jumps by 5-10%. While some have questioned that statistic, the fundamental idea of incorporating recommendations from friends into the ads they're seeing online makes a great deal of sense, and it's the business model of more than one company.

Still, Gundotra won't rule out the possibility of sponsored stories down the road.

"We don't serve ads [on Google+], but that doesn't mean we won't have sponsored stories," he says. "There may be more relevant forms of advertising that we do believe work."

The Business of Hangouts

There may be other sources of revenue for Google+, though. One of the much-touted advantages Google+ has over competitors (perceived or otherwise) is Hangouts — video chats you can have with multiple people, even through a mobile device and are absolutely free.

Hangouts have been a major differentiator for Google+ since the beginning, but until recently Google had positioned them as a casual, consumer-friendly feature, not a business tool (a new ad for Hangouts shows a work group having a meeting). Since their introduction, many businesses (including Mashable) have adopted Hangouts for collaboration, and it begs the question: why hasn't Google been more proactive about courting business users?

"We hear this so much," says Horowitz. "So many startups are running their business on Hangouts. Even big companies who would be embarrassed if I told you which ones. Their expansive camera units take longer to boot up than it takes to launch a hangout with commodity hardware and webcams in your laptop."

"There are lots of examples of great consumer tech coming into the enterprise," Gundotra adds, "because it's just so awesome. You could go back to 1991 with Windows. Enterprises really didn't want it, but it was just so great. If we can solve a problem for every human on earth, then businesses of course will use it."

So when will Google announce Hangouts for Business?

"We're very well aware of the opportunity in enterprise. We're not ignoring it. You should expect announcements from us in the future that add unique features that enterprises would need."

Google+'s Long Game

To some, Google+ made too many stumbles along the way to become a real Facebook competitor. As Gundotra and Horowitz see it, that's the wrong way of looking at it. Google+ is simply Google's way of taking its many disparate services — search, YouTube, Maps, etc. — and making them more relevant by incorporating the user's personal data. If some of those services then end up rubbing up against what Facebook offers, so be it.

In the bigger picture of platforms, though, the comparison is more than appropriate. Both Facebook and Google want you to spend your time on their site, not the other's. Facebook began with social interaction and spread to broader services such as messaging. Google's taking it the other way around — creating a suite of extremely popular products and then persuading users to get social with them.

Which approach is better? I don't think there's much question that Google's services improve greatly when you add in personal data, be it location, gender, interest or other factors. But the social component is incredibly powerful, and in that aspect Facebook is king (Facebook's engagement numbers are massive compared to Google+ — the stream, anyway). For the longest time, people have been trained to socialize there. It's difficult to imagine a world, even in the long term, where that activity shifts to Google.

But maybe it doesn't need to. Can Google+ still be considered a success even if the Stream never quite becomes as influential as Facebook's news feed? Google probably would like to think so, but it's clear that, for now at least, many perceive Google+ as a poor man's Facebook. And if perceptions are great enough, it has a way of become reality.

Yep, Google+ has a problem.


Source & Image : CNN Tech

Michigan Officially Recognizes June 30 as Social Media Day






The list of places celebrating continues to grow. This week Michigan became the third state to officially proclaim June 30 as Social Media Day.

[More from Mashable: ]


Governor Rick Snyder (whose Twitter handle is ) signed the on June 27, making this the first year that Michigan will officially recognize Social Media Day statewide.


Michigan has a . The state's government maintains 137 social media accounts across Facebook, Twitter and Youtube. Its Facebook presence is the second-largest of any tourism agency and has the third-largest state government following.

[More from Mashable: ]


The governor and various departments do regular Q&A; sessions during online town halls or by using such as #AskGovSnyder, #MIJobs and #MIBudget.


Michigan's Social Media Day celebration will be entirely virtual. "As a state government, we really couldn't hold a statewide party," said Nikki Sunstrum, Michigan's social media specialist. The state is, however, as a way to thank its residents for supporting social media.



Although Michigan's Social Media Day celebration is virtual, Detroit is holding the largest in-person Social Media Day celebration in the state.


is being held at Sound Board at the MotorCity Casino Hotel. It will focus on entrepreneurs, start-up companies and local social media communities with an expected attendance of 1,200.


"We tried to make it a party with substance," says Nicole Yelland, an organizer of Social Media Day Detroit. The event aims to allow people and their favorite brands to interact IRL. "It's always exciting when you meet someone from a brand that you follow — you get to put a face to the name," Yelland says.


SEE ALSO:


According to Yelland, a number of requests for a proclamation have been made at the city level to no avail. She considers this week's announcement was a win for social media across the state.


"It felt like the state's proclamation was their way of saying 'Hey social media community, we recognize you,'" Yelland said. "Props to them for doing all of this."


We invite you to join fellow social media enthusiasts by hosting or attending a in your area. Already have big Social Media Day plans? Tell us more about how you're celebrating the digital revolution in the comments below.




Ways You Can Participate



  • Sign up to attend or organize your own event on the page.

  • Use the #smday hashtag on Twitter, Instagram, Google+ and any other social network of your choice.

  • Find your Mashable Meetup community:



Social Media Day 2012 Is Presented By Motorola Mobility



This story originally published on Mashable .



Source & Image : Yahoo

Microsoft names new industry hardware chief




SEATTLE (Reuters) - The Microsoft Corp executive in charge of relations with PC makers is moving to a new job just two weeks after the software company broke with tradition by announcing it would manufacture a tablet computer, ruffling feathers of some hardware partners.


Steven Guggenheimer will move from his position of corporate vice president of Microsoft's original equipment manufacturer unit July 1, the company said, to take up an unspecified new senior leadership job within the company.


The move was the result of long-term planning, Microsoft said. Guggenheimer will be replaced by another Microsoft executive from the unit, Nick Parker.


Microsoft broke with more than 30 years of focusing on software last Monday when it announced it would make two new devices called Surface to run its new Windows 8 operating system, in an attempt to directly counter Apple Inc's iPad and lightweight laptops.


Some hardware makers complained they were kept in the dark about the move, which potentially puts Microsoft in direct competition with PC manufacturers .


(Reporting By Bill Rigby; Editing by David Gregorio)




Source & Image : Yahoo

U.S. investigating Google unit over patent licensing




WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. antitrust regulators are investigating whether Google unit Motorola Mobility is living up to licensing commitments made when its patents were adopted as industry standards, two people familiar with the probe said on Friday.


The Federal Trade Commission sent civil investigative demands, essentially civil subpoenas, to companies this week asking them about Motorola Mobility's licensing practices, one person said.


The industry standards affected have to do with Wi-Fi and video standards, one of the people said.


Motorola Mobility has sued Microsoft Corp for infringement of industry standard patents and asked for its Xbox product to be barred from the U.S. market.


Standard-setting bodies meet periodically to determine which technology will be used industry-wide, which ensures devices will work together. Companies who hold those patents commit to licensing them broadly and on reasonable terms, even to competitors.


"We take our commitments to license on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms very seriously," a Google spokeswoman said in an email when asked about the probe.


A spokeswoman for Microsoft confirmed receipt of the FTC inquiry but declined to describe what was in it. Apple Inc declined comment on whether it received a similar inquiry.


The FTC declined to comment.


The FTC also has a broader investigation underway into whether Google distorts its search results to steer people to its related businesses, like Google Places. The agency recently hired a big name litigator, Beth Wilkinson, to lead its probe.


Bloomberg was the first to report the Motorola patent investigation on Friday.


(Reporting By Diane Bartz and Poornima Gupta; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)




Source & Image : Yahoo

Facebook's stock ends week lower




NEW YORK (AP) — During the week that the bankers behind Facebook's initial public offering issued their first ratings on the company, its shares fell nearly 6 percent.

The stock ended trading Friday at $31.09, down 27 cents for the day. For the week, it lost almost $2, or 5.9 percent, compared with last Friday's closing price of $33.05.

The 40-day quiet period for analysts who work for the banks that underwrote Facebook Inc.'s IPO ended this week, meaning they finally could issue ratings and opinions on the stock.

In a flood of reports on Wednesday, they mostly rated it "neutral" or "buy." Morgan Stanley, the lead bank for the IPO, set a target price of $38.

That's the very same price it initially sold for — and has failed to match since.



Source & Image : Yahoo