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First Amazon Took Down Booksellers….Are Publishers Next?

Posted under Facebook,Google,Social networking,Technology News,Twitter by ouiss on Wednesday 12 January 2011 at 9:08 pm

It’s not that Amazon set out to destroy small book stores. They just offered a better option for a large number of people. Now, Amazon is increasingly offering small features here and there that taken together may start to make a traditional publisher a lot less necessary for authors.

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First Amazon Took Down Booksellers….Are Publishers Next?


So When Do The “Droid Did” Verizon iPhone Commercials Start?

Posted under Android,Facebook,Google,Mobile,Motorola,Technology News,Twitter,iPhone by ouiss on Wednesday 12 January 2011 at 8:51 pm

Maybe you heard, Verizon finally has the iPhone. Or it will, in a few weeks .

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So When Do The “Droid Did” Verizon iPhone Commercials Start?


How Google Speeds Up The Chrome Release Cycle (Slideshow)

Posted under Facebook,Google,Software,Technology News,Twitter by ouiss on Tuesday 11 January 2011 at 7:24 pm

Google’s approach to developing its Chrome browser is to release updates early and often .

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How Google Speeds Up The Chrome Release Cycle (Slideshow)


Facebook Paid Farm Bureau $8.5 Million To Acquire Fb.com

Posted under Facebook,Technology News,Twitter by ouiss on Tuesday 11 January 2011 at 7:09 pm

On November 15th, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed that Facebook had acquired Fb.com from The American Farm Bureau Federation to use as the domain for internal email addresses now that the Facebook Messages were parked on Facebook.com.

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Facebook Paid Farm Bureau $8.5 Million To Acquire Fb.com


Kindle Comes To The Mac App Store, Already No. 5 Free App

Posted under Android,BlackBerry,Facebook,Mobile,Technology News,Twitter,Windows,iPhone by ouiss on Monday 10 January 2011 at 11:26 pm

Continuing its quest to be on every major computing platform, Kindle is now available as an app in the n ew Mac App Store . As the first ebook app in teh Mac App Store, it is already the fifth most downloaded free app.

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Kindle Comes To The Mac App Store, Already No. 5 Free App


Amazon launches Kindle application for the iPhone

Posted under COMPANIES,Mobile,iPhone by admin on Wednesday 4 March 2009 at 2:18 pm

Amazon.com

Not looking to drop $360 bucks on a gadget purposed almost solely for book reading, but still want to partake in Amazon’s new found love for eBooks? You’re not alone – and if you’ve got an iPhone or iPod Touch, you’re in luck. As we’d assumed they would, Amazon has just launched a free Kindle application for Apple’s much-lauded touchscreen, available immediately. (more…)


Amazon working again, but what went wrong?

Posted under Media News by admin on Saturday 7 June 2008 at 7:43 am

A two-hour Amazon.com outage is over. Now on to the post-mortem: what triggered the problem?

Amazon declared itself clear of the problem this afternoon. “The Amazon retail site was down for approximately two hours earlier today beginning around 10:25 a.m. The site (is) back up,” the company said in statement.

But as to the explanation, the company only hinted that its complicated computing infrastructure was, unsurprisingly, a culprit.

“Amazon’s systems are very complex and on rare occasions, despite our best efforts, they may experience problems. We work to minimize any disruption and to get the site back as quickly as possible,” the company said, declining to comment further.

Human error?
The most likely culprit was simple human error, in the estimation of Shawn White, director of operations for Keynote Systems, which monitors Web site availability.

“Some engineer might have made a particular change, not knowing it could cause a trickle-down effect” that eventually brought down the site.

For example, he said, somebody in charge of maintenance might have been directing Internet traffic to a particular group of servers, but selected the wrong group.

But at Amazon? “What I find still so surprising is it happened in the middle of the day. Typically you do that in off-peak hours,” White said. “They rank on the top with performance and availability, consistently, time and time again.”

Network attack?
Another possible explanation is an attack such as the distributed denial-of-service (DDOS) attack that struck Amazon and other high-profile sites in 2000. White thinks it unlikely, though, that a crushing load of network traffic brought Amazon down.

“These guys are experts at dealing with flash floods of users,” including those that routinely arrive during peak shopping days. “Usually, when you see a site going under because of traffic issues or a denial-of-service attack, you see a gradual slowdown in performance and drop in availability. Here we saw at 10:16 a.m. it completely dropped off 100 percent.”

Soups Ranjan, a senior member of the technical staff of network protection and management company Narus, hasn’t yet found any attack evidence.

“It doesn’t seem to be the result of a network-initiated attack, at least from my preliminary analysis from our probes,” Ranjan said.

Human error may not sound as gripping a tale as a network attack, but there’s plenty of drama for the people responsible. And it’s the career-limiting variety of drama, said Illuminata analyst Gordon Haff, who hazarded a guess that Amazon’s problem involved its front-end Web servers.

The security group of WebSense, a Web site and communications protection company, also saw no evidence Amazon’s problem was security related.

CNET staff writer Robert Vamosi contributed to this report.

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