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Wednesday 16 March 2016

Website Responsive


In the recent period has spread the use of the Internet through mobile devices, smart phones and tablets compared with the usual computer so become web designers dramatically care by site templates for browsing via mobile devices. Although some sites which has a well-designed and coordinated the computer screen template,however, sometimes find the same site template is unsuitable appears on smart phones screens, which loses the site many visitors , in addition to that of non-responsive templates sites negatively affect the rankings in Google after the addition of the phrase "mobile-friendly" search results that appear down the addresses of sites responsive subjects with mobile feature.



Any person who has a website or a blog to make sure his appearance on the various screens of various sizes on smartphones or tablet, whether the screen in the vertical or horizontal position. You can make a preview of your image on the screens of smart phones by going to this site and copy the link to your site and preview its determination to different screen sizes. Or preview by adding this code m = 1 /? After your website link in your browser. If you find any problem in the presentation of your site through this preview you will need to speed up the amendment in your site to fit the display on all screens.

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Thursday 21 January 2016

Free

Free:


 The Future of A Radical Price by Chris Anderson (2009). Freemium has become the battle cry of a whole generation of app and game publishers who are disrupting the purveyors of ordinary software or console games. Anderson followed up on his The Long Tail by following up on its impact and how businesses can profit more by giving things away than they can by charging for them. Free, or freemium, is a business strategy that has come into its own in the age of the internet, when competition has been flattered and prices have cratered like never before. You have to be a student of Ray Kurzweil (see below) to see the impact of exponential technologies. A transistor that cost $10 in 1961 now is part of an Intel chip with two billion transistors that sell for $300 (making the price per transistor virtually free, or 0.000015 cents). Companies have a recognized the power of freemium business models have because monumental. They include Google, Facebook, Zynga, Twitter, and a host of other internet firms. The book’s appendix has a bunch of different variations on giving something away for free and charging for something else.

to download the book just click here
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The Facebook Effect

 The Facebook Effect:



The Inside Story of the Company That is Connecting the World by David Kirkpatrick (2010). This tale chronicles the founding of Facebook by Mark Zuckerberg and the enormous consequences that resulted from seemingly small decisions. Those decisions moved Facebook from a dorm room to a sprawling empire with nearly a billion users. The story is probably a lot closer to the truth than Ben Mezrich’s The Accidental Billionaires, a fictionalized account of the Facebook story that became the basis of the Oscar-nominated film The Social Network. Kirkpatrick had the full cooperation of Facebook’s executives and its investors. Kirkpatrick captures the flavor of excitement that was buzzing throughout Silicon Valley during the rise of social networking. He notes how executives came and went while Zuckerberg survived. Owen Van Natta, for instance, negotiated a deal to sell Facebook to Yahoo for $1 billion, only to have the deal vetoed by the cherubic-faced Zuckerberg.
to download the book just click here
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World War 3.0

World War 3.0:



 Microsoft and its Enemies by Ken Auletta (2001). This book chronicles the great struggle between the government’s antitrust regulators and Microsoft over reining in the company’s monopolistic practices. Microsoft founder Bill Gates, government attorney David Boies and Judge Richard Posner come into sharp focus in this epic story. Auletta’s ability to gain access to the top titans of business and be a fly on the wall during their key moments is unmatched. The tale showed what happened when a hodge-podge of individuals stood up against the most powerful company in the tech industry and turned the tables on it. A moment that will make you squirm is when Craig Barrett, then the CEO of Intel, bore down hard on his loose-cannon technologist Steven McGeady, not to testify against Microsoft and Gates. McGeady stood his ground and testified.
to download the book just click here
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The Chip

 The Chip:




 How Two Americans Invented the Microchip and Launched a Revolution by T.R. Reid (1985). This story chronicles how the electronics revolution began. The story shows the race to create the first integrated circuit, commonly known as a chip, that became the brains of everything electronic. Robert Noyce of Fairchild Semiconductor (and later Intel) and Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments created their own versions of the chip independently. Then the legal wrangling that ensued muddied the waters about who came up with the invention first. I recall reading this book and interviewing the taciturn and humble Kilby about his accomplishments back in Dallas more than two decades ago. He was a gentle giant, while Noyce became the industry’s statesman. In 2000, Kilby received a Nobel Prize for physics.


to download the book just click here
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In The Plex

"In The Plex" by Steven Levy


"In The Plex" by Steven Levy

Google has shaped the internet since its founding in 1998. In his book, Levy takes a close-up look at the company, one of the most successful in history.
Price: $16.76
to download the book just click here
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