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Stories from May 24, 2012
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1.After Facebook fails (law.harvard.edu)
367 points by angusgr on May 24, 2012 | 202 comments
2.Most popular browser missing (Chrome)... (facebook.com)
277 points by chrisacky on May 24, 2012 | 115 comments
3.Hello Downloader (alphabasic.com)
267 points by alainbryden on May 24, 2012 | 162 comments
4.API Design - Matt Gemmell (mattgemmell.com)
253 points by protomyth on May 24, 2012 | 26 comments
5.So you are making good money, now STFU (jacquesmattheij.com)
206 points by jacquesm on May 24, 2012 | 113 comments
6.How Tim Cook is changing Apple (cnn.com)
193 points by maayank on May 24, 2012 | 107 comments
7.Python for Data Analysis (new O'Reilly book from creator of Pandas) (oreilly.com)
186 points by plessthanpt05 on May 24, 2012 | 57 comments
8.Pipe Viewer (ivarch.com)
162 points by kermatt on May 24, 2012 | 26 comments
9.Yahoo Axis Chrome Extension Leaks Private Certificate File (nikcub.appspot.com)
157 points by nikcub on May 24, 2012 | 66 comments
10.Apple Has Removed Airfoil Speakers Touch From The iOS App Store (rogueamoeba.com)
158 points by protomyth on May 24, 2012 | 165 comments
11.Require free access to scientific articles based on taxpayer-funded research. (whitehouse.gov)
155 points by tylerneylon on May 24, 2012 | 22 comments
12.Ask HN: How do you stay productive after work?
150 points by bking on May 24, 2012 | 88 comments
13.Scribd says: Beat our programmers at a coding challenge (scribd.com)
143 points by jennylin on May 24, 2012 | 107 comments
14.Piccsy Pitchdeck (piccsy.com)
140 points by jamesgolick on May 24, 2012 | 87 comments
15.Introducing Facebook Camera (fb.com)
143 points by sahillavingia on May 24, 2012 | 130 comments
16.Protecting a Laptop from Simple and Sophisticated Attacks (grepular.com)
130 points by arb99 on May 24, 2012 | 53 comments
17.No-cost desktop software development is dead on Windows 8 (arstechnica.com)
126 points by Goronmon on May 24, 2012 | 187 comments
18.GCC Explorer (xania.org)
126 points by dazzawazza on May 24, 2012 | 16 comments
19.Kickstarter hides failure (misener.org)
115 points by misener on May 24, 2012 | 84 comments

Judging by the gossip I heard while at AOL, he surely isn't the only person using AOL's offices and food without contributing to AOL, but he's the only one who isn't actually employed by AOL.
21.Miles per Gallon versus Liters per 100 Kilometers (skepticblog.org)
112 points by tokenadult on May 24, 2012 | 87 comments
22.Old Farts Know How to Code (nick.typepad.com)
114 points by breischl on May 24, 2012 | 71 comments
23.Github: CoffeeScript cracks the top 10 languages (github.com/languages)
110 points by martyman on May 24, 2012 | 66 comments
24.Books Every Entrepreneur Should Read (thedailymuse.com)
108 points by anthonydramirez on May 24, 2012 | 62 comments

Here's my take on Facebook (disclaimer: I work for Google, these opinions are purely my own and not representative of the company, yadda yadda yadda).

Display advertising works best when you have sufficient, quality inventory (publishers whose sites serve ads) such that you attract advertisers in sufficient quantity and quality. Targeting in display ads works because from the publishers, the intermediary has information to figure out what your interests are and so on. A common misconception from fearmongers is that your data is being sold. It is not. Advertisers are paying to have their creative put in front of a particular audience.

The most important strategic move Facebook made in the last few years (IMHO) is the Like button. Whether or not you "Like" things is irrelevant. The main purpose of that "Like" button is (IMHO) as a tracking cookie. Visit any Like-enabled site and you see a small piece of content from Facebook that tells Facebook all the sites you visit. It's a tracking cookie like any other and personally I have no problem with that. Just make no mistake why the Like button exists.

Facebook also has a wealth of information in terms of who your friends are, what your interests are, your relationship status and so on. It's this alleged treasure trove that people point to as the real value of Facebook (combined with the network effect).

I disagree. I think that information is largely useless for a number of reasons:

1. Because of social games and the like who your friends are on Facebook loses a lot of meaning. In the very least Facebook has to filter that information and determine who your real friends are (which it probably does anyway for News Feed filtering and so on);

2. Where people go and what people do is far more accurate than what people will tell you about themselves. As House says--or used to say--"people lie". When you ask someone their interests or opinions it will pass through various filters of what that person thinks you want to hear, what they want the world to believe, what they themselves wish they were and so on. It's a distortion.

It's a bit like dating or job hunting. You look at any online profile or CV and you'll see lies, distortions, omissions and so on. As Chris Rock said, for the first 6 months you're not dating them, you're dating their representative.

Facebook has no search engine. Whatever you say about the size of display ads, search advertising is still far bigger. With search you have intent. People want to find things by their actions. On Facebook ads are an annoyance.

It's the difference between wandering the streets shouting "does anybody want ice cream?" versus putting an ad in front of a bunch of people who have already told you that they're looking for ice cream.

Their mobile presence is at the behest of Apple, Google and (arguably) Microsoft. Mobile (IMHO) poses an existential risk to Facebook, which in part explains the exorbitant price tag paid for Instagram (it has nothing to do with any alleged "bubble"). Much of the engagement on Facebook is because of games. Those games are increasingly going mobile. This is bad for Facebook.

At $100B IPO valuation that put Facebook being worth half of Google with 5-8% of the revenue and significant strategic risks. Of course it was overvalued. It's still valuable but it will take some time to figure out exactly how much it's worth.

26.Facebook Shows There's a Sucker Born Every Minute (wsj.com)
101 points by bond on May 24, 2012 | 59 comments
27.Xbox 360 Should Be Banned from U.S. for Violating Patents, Judge Says (time.com)
99 points by evo_9 on May 24, 2012 | 68 comments
28.Kickstarter for a JavaScript top level domain (.js TLD) (github.com/ozten)
97 points by jpsirois on May 24, 2012 | 83 comments
29.First Retire... Then Get Rich (mrmoneymustache.com)
90 points by wavephorm on May 24, 2012 | 106 comments
30.Scaling Riak at Kiip (basho.com)
91 points by oinksoft on May 24, 2012 | 39 comments

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