Ingress reminds me of the pokemkon game that Google made up for April fools day. I was very disappointed that that game wasn't real.
I'd get excited about image search technology if it could identify components of pictures (e.g. a red house, an angry cat, etc). This means that when I search for "happy family at beach" the search would actually look…
Personally, as a CEO, I would like to have an investor questioning my moves so that I am forced to consider my choices from different perspectives. If I'm constantly being told I'm the golden boy then I'm doomed.
That is bloody awesome!
I'd say that you're right, mate. Stuff outside of your circle of friends (i.e. this site) does enrich lives. So why make tiiny? Maybe 'connectedness to their friends' isn't a good metric for tiiny, as maybe that's not…
This seems to be a step in the wrong direction. The user's connectedness to their friends is now becoming even more superficial. People already spend too much time consuming social content that doesn't enrich their…
Ingress reminds me of the pokemkon game that Google made up for April fools day. I was very disappointed that that game wasn't real.
I'd get excited about image search technology if it could identify components of pictures (e.g. a red house, an angry cat, etc). This means that when I search for "happy family at beach" the search would actually look…
Personally, as a CEO, I would like to have an investor questioning my moves so that I am forced to consider my choices from different perspectives. If I'm constantly being told I'm the golden boy then I'm doomed.
That is bloody awesome!
I'd say that you're right, mate. Stuff outside of your circle of friends (i.e. this site) does enrich lives. So why make tiiny? Maybe 'connectedness to their friends' isn't a good metric for tiiny, as maybe that's not…
This seems to be a step in the wrong direction. The user's connectedness to their friends is now becoming even more superficial. People already spend too much time consuming social content that doesn't enrich their…