Monday, 3 December 2012

Facebook May Buy WhatsApp......

Whatsapp, the multiplatform mobile messaging app that has been one of the runaway success stories for ad-free, paid services, has been in talks to be acquired by Facebook, according to sources close to the matter.






We’re still digging around on potential price and other details about how advanced the deal is. But as mobile becomes the latest battleground in the Internet’s game of thrones, you can see how such a deal could make sense.

For starters, it would be another way for Facebook to continue extending its touchpoints with mobile consumers, an area Mark Zuckerberg asserted, on the occasion of reaching 1 billion monthly active users on Facebook, would be crucial to Facebook reaching the “next billion.”

“The big thing is obviously going to be mobile,” Zuckerberg told BusinessWeek. “There are 5 billion people in the world who have phones.”

Whatsapp also has a footprint that fits with Facebook’s focus on international/emerging markets: The messaging app has users in over a hundred countries covering 750 mobile networks, on the iOS, Android, BlackBerry, Nokia S40, Symbian and Windows Phone platforms.

The startup also has demonstrable scale. We’ve heard the company has something like 100 million (!!!) daily active users globally and these users utilize Whatsapp to send messages to family and friends. Every minute a user spends on Whatsapp is likely at the expense of a minute spent on Facebook. :)

At the end of October 2011, the last time Whatsapp updated its usage numbers, it announced that it was serving 1 billion messages per day — “Just how much is 1 billion messages? That is 41,666,667 messages an hour, 694,444 messages a minute, and 11,574 messages a second,” the company wrote then. The app, which is built on Erlang, has the potential and ambition to grow more and wants to provide “a great mobile messaging system for a global market, regardless of your handset.”

It is currently looking for translators in Arabic, Danish, Dutch, Farsi, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, Urdu, “and many more languages.”

Unlike Facebook, Whatsapp is a paid app. And obviously, having a paid, ad-free service is an expansion of Facebook’s business model beyond advertising. We’ve already seen Facebook launch another service that diversifies it — Gifts — and the positive impact that had with investors.

And, as a paid app, Whatsapp is doing well: It’s currently the No. 2 paid app in Apple’s App Store (U.S. version), where it sells for $0.99. (Although there are often sales on the app where it gets discounted or given away.) On Google’s Play Android store, it is free for the first year, and then $0.99 per year thereafter. Google indicates that the Android app has had between 100 million and 500 million installs to date.

Ironically, Whatsapp’s explicit disavowal of advertising as a revenue source could even work in its favor during acquisition talks. Facebook has faced significant backlash over how much its advertising has become more prominent and (some argue) intrusive as it attempts a meaningful revenue steam. Having an ad-free, paid feature as part of its portfolio could be a way for Facebook to answer or mitigate some of Wall Street’s criticism. Whatsapp is a global business with many active users, a clear business model, and strong momentum. So there.

And still, today, the business models of the two companies couldn’t be more different.

“Advertising isn’t just the disruption of aesthetics, the insults to your intelligence and the interruption of your train of thought,” Whatsapp co-founder Jan Koum wrote in a blog post earlier this year. “At every company that sells ads, a significant portion of their engineering team spends their day tuning data mining, writing better code to collect all your personal data, upgrading the servers that hold all the data and making sure it’s all being logged and collated and sliced and packaged and shipped out… And at the end of the day the result of it all is a slightly different advertising banner in your browser or on your mobile screen. Remember, when advertising is involved you the user are the product.” [Koum's emphasis.]

And that is just one reason why a Whatsapp/Facebook acquisition would be a surprise. At other times, Koum has been public about his distaste for startups that sell out quickly. “Totally agree with Vinod Khosla,” he wrote in July. “People starting companies for a quick sale are a disgrace to the valley.” (He’s also, btw, noted that getting on TC shouldn’t be a goal in itself. Too true.)

It’s unclear whether statements like this translate into deal-breakers with Facebook, or whether any parties would get bought out, were a deal to happen.

But there is some other great detail to this story that gives it an extra layer of interest: The two co-founders, Koum and Brian Acton, first worked together at Yahoo. It’s where they developed their dislike of advertising-based business models.

Yahoo happens to be in an acquiring mind, and has shown interest in mobile specifically. (Coincidentally, Yahoo is currently also revamping its messaging services.)

Whatsapp’s business development head, Neeraj Arora, came to Whatsapp from Google, where he was a senior member of the corporate development team. According to his LinkedIn profile, he “led acquisitions and strategic investments across products and geographies. Recent transactions at Google include the acquisitions of Zagat, Dailydeal.de, Slide, Picnik, Cleversense, PittPatt and Talkbin.”

And Acton himself apparently has pitched to Facebook before — perhaps for a job, perhaps with another product, perhaps with this idea.

“Facebook turned me down. It was a great opportunity to connect with some fantastic people. Looking forward to life’s next adventure,” he wrote in August 2009, the same year they founded Whatsapp, which is backed by Sequoia.

Acton’s most recent tweet was on January 13, 2012 (no, he’s not an active tweeter), a day notable for Whatsapp getting pulled from the App Store (restored four days later). The tweet was “Whatsapp.”

Note: We have reached out to both Facebook and the Whatsapp founders by email but we have not heard back. We will update this post with more information asap when we do.

Friday, 19 October 2012

Mother gets life-imprisonment for Gluing her daughter to the wall with Supper Glue as punishment


Tony Gutierrez / AP Elizabeth Escalona, 23, breaks down as she responds to a line of questions on Thursday in Dallas. Escalona admitted to beating her toddler and gluing her hands to a wall. By NBC News  and wire services DALLAS -- Elizabeth Escalona, the 23-year-old mother of five who admitted to gluing her.

Everyday black friday deal ☺️

daughter’s hands to the wall and beating her as potty training punishment, was sentenced Friday to 99 years. In announcing the sentence, state District Judge Larry Mitchell said Escalona "savagely beat" her child and  deserved to be punished. During closing arguments earlier Friday, prosecutor Eren Price told the court to  give Escalona's children peace by knowing she would never come walking through their door in the future. 



The prosecution showed photos of the apartment where Jocelyn Cedillo was glued to the wall, saying "We  have to imagine what it was like."Defense attorneys said Escalona needs anger management and treatment.  They painted her life as a miserable one of abuse and drugs. Escalona faced from probation to life in prison,  and prosecutors had sought 45 years behind bars. While on the stand Thursday, Escalona sobbed as a  prosecutor ordered her to look at the injuries she inflicted on her daughter's body. She cried and didn't speak  for several seconds after prosecutor Eren Price displayed a photo of then-2-year-old Jocelyn during  Escalona's sentencing hearing. Dozens of red and brown marks from the September 2011 beating covered  Jocelyn's back. "Ms. Escalona, if you can do it, you can look at it," Price said in a loud, sharp voice. View  more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com. Escalona, who pleaded guilty in July to felony injury of a child, was on the  witness stand for a second day. Police say Escalona kicked her daughter in the stomach, beat her with a  milk jug, then stuck her hands to an apartment wall with an adhesive commonly known as Super Glue.  Escalona's other children told authorities their mother attacked Jocelyn due to potty training problems. 
Jocelyn suffered bleeding in her brain, a fractured rib, bruises and bite marks, and was in a coma for a  couple of days. Some skin had been torn off her hands, where doctors also found paint chips from the  apartment wall, witnesses testified. Prosecutors have portrayed Escalona as an unfit mother with a history of  violence, and Price has repeatedly referred to her as a "monster." Escalona has admitted she behaved like a  monster when she beat Jocelyn, but insists she isn't one now. Price asked Escalona what she thought should  happen in the case. Escalona replied in a soft, halting voice: "I should be put away." Then, she added, "But I  also think I should be given a second chance." When Price asked her why, she responded: "Because I'm not  a monster." Escalona also testified that her children were a source of stress. "They didn't bother me, but I did  (need) a little break," she said. She described one of her sons misbehaving and getting into fights and  another daughter once leaving home without her permission.



Under questioning from defense attorney Angie  N'Duka, Escalona said she was learning ways to deal with her anger and the stress of raising five children.  More from NBCDFW.com: Rapper Nelly detained after heroin, pot found on bus But Price said she still  didn't understand what could have caused the attack on Jocelyn. "Explain to us what about your stress is  unique from what everybody else in this world lives through every single day," she said. In her testimony,  Escalona admitted she often doesn't tell the truth and had lied to doctors and others assigned to her case. But  she resisted Price's repeated efforts to get her to admit she was a liar. "I'm not a liar," Escalona said. "I  have a hard time trusting people." Escalona acknowledged several missteps in her childhood: hanging around  with gang members and trying marijuana around the age of 11, assaulting her mother at 12 and getting  pregnant with her first child at 14. She also admitted drinking and doing drugs after she was released from  jail on bond in February. Despite what she described as problems paying rent and other bills, Escalona  admitted she was using marijuana about twice a day in the time before she attacked Jocelyn. Price said  Escalona will be eligible for parole in 30 years. N'Duka said she plans to appeal. NBCDFW.com and The  Associated Press contributed to this report.

All free just for you....

Friday, 5 October 2012

PHOTO: Bluetooth Pen



Have you ever wonder where technology if heading to? Here is what is called a Magic Pen. This device has a recorder capable of converting your written notes into electronic format and transfers it to your PDA’s like Mobile Phones, Computer via the built-in Bluetooth device that looks like the cover of the Pen.




The Pen has a Bluetooth Device, Laser Locator for conversion, Nib of refill and a Memory Disk

Amazing isn’t it! The bad news it that it will make this world lazy and produce lots of unintelligent people.

However, journalist will find it what I called “Ease of Job” and makes the work much more easy and secretive. Authors and illustrators will love this also.

Wait a minute! It is only a design. Not yet invented.

But experts are really looking forward to making micro-devices like this a reality.

Monday, 17 September 2012

NNPC 2012 Recruitment - deadline within 6 weeks (by Wednesday, 17 October 2012)

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is the National Oil Company of Nigeria and a major player in the Nigerian and International Oil and Gas Industry. The Corporation has exciting prospects and operations across the complete value chain of Oil and Gas covering, Upstream, Midstream and Downstream sectors.

As part of our efforts in repositioning the Corporation for growth and operational excellence, we are looking to bring on board dynamic and ambitious young graduates and experienced professionals who will create a strategic springboard to maximize the benefits accruable Nigeria and Nigerians from the Oil and Gas Industry.

Successful candidates can look forward to a challenging, culturally diverse and team based workplace. This is in addition to exceptional development opportunities and competitive total reward package offered by the Corporation

Qualification

> Bsc

> HND

> ND 

Method of Application

*** Please note that if you don't have your credential readily available, don't apply yet. this is because you will be required to upload them once.No room for editing
*** Make sure your CV is accurate and reams with your CV

>> log on to their website here. look at the left-side pane and click on the link that apply to you

good luck..........

Saturday, 25 August 2012

Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, is dead.

Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, is dead, announced today.

 

He was 82 years. He died at about 7:41pm today Sat Aug 25.

May his gentle soul rest in peace..... Amen.