First things first, let's see who's been discussing Google? It was searchenginewatch.com who wrote an article called Google Reviews Japanese Court Order Demanding Removal of Autocomplete Terms.
Google: also known as The Big G
An anonymous plaintiff claims to have lost his job and suffered great humiliation at the hands of Google, which displays more than 10,000 search results defaming or disparaging him when a searcher selects one of the autocomplete results on his nameand went on to say
Tokyo District Court granted an injunction against the search giant on March 19, though the anonymous man behind the petition won't have his way quite yet. Google is reviewing the court order, which would force Google's operations based in U.S. to obey the Japanese court of law.
Next we have a site that's been writing about Cisco - The Double-Edged Sword Of Social Media.
They wrote:
Confirming The Fool Call it the Cisco Fatty Syndrome... right ...
Do you remember the Cisco Fatty incident? I very much do (as I love learning life lessons vicariously). It seems there was this very promising young woman who was fresh out of college and looking for work in Silicon Valley. This was back in 2009, long after the Dot Com heyday had passed. The economy was in serious trouble, and the job-seekers market of yore had become an employer's market
Finally we have Tracelytics Raises $5.2 Million to Boost SaaS APM Solution from www.eweek.com, focussing on Bain Capital Ventures. They made a few good points, particularly
Tracelytics,a startup provider of next-generation application performance management (APM)software as a service (SaaS), announced the close of a $5.2 million Series Afinancing round led by Bain Capital Venturesand
"If yourapplication is under-performing, then your business is under-performing,"said Ben Nye, managing director at Bain Capital Ventures, in a statement."Today's enterprises need full-stack tracing to manage the performance oftheir highly distributed applications. We were impressed with the Tracelyticsteam's deep understanding of the performance issues faced by modern businessapplications; they've built their entire solution from the ground up throughthe lens of the customer."
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