Thursday, March 8, 2012

Verizon Communications Releases List Of Devices Getting Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich - and my other links of the day

Google
Google: also known as The Big G

.

So, it's time for another links roundup. We'll be talking about Verizon Communications Facebook and Google.

Right, who's been discussing Verizon? It was techcrunch.com who wrote an article called Verizon Releases List Of Devices Getting Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.

What did they point out about Verizon? Well...:
But after seeing Verizon's updated ICS update device list, I'm thinking that figure will change dramatically in the coming months
and went on to say
The latest version of the OS was released alongside the Samsung Galaxy Nexus back in December, and is probably in the hands of about 2 percent of users as we speak.


Next it's a site that's been writing about Facebook - Facebook's Immunity to User Fatigue.

They wrote:
However, one social network people do not seem to be tired of, at least not yet, happens to be the current creme of the crop. You guessed it - we're talking about Facebook
... right ...
Lately, there has been a lot of talk about social media fatigue. Research has shown that some users are simply burnt out from the phenomenon many internet experts said was hear to say. This is not too shocking considering that quite a few users have been plugged in since the good old days when Friendster and MySpace were all the rage.


Finally we have Cloud Defies Definition from technorati.com, focussing on Google. Good stuff from them, particularly
Cloud computing has been described by The National Institute of Standards and Technology, an established agency of the US Department of Commerce, most recently as "a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction," with ubiquitous being a key term
and
This description is the current one, published just six months ago by this government agency invested with the authority to describe secure proprietary enabled methods of tech know-how and participation for public safety. Ubiquitous is a key idea, since cloud availability is an ideal, and not defined by rule.

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