Yahoo! is an Internet corporation globally known for its Web portal, search engine Yahoo Search, and related services, including Yahoo Directory, Yahoo Mail, Yahoo News, Yahoo Finance, Yahoo Groups, Yahoo Answers, advertising, online mapping, video sharing, fantasy sports and its social media website. It is one of the most popular sites in the United States. The site began in 1994 as a directory of other websites, organized in a hierarchy, as opposed to a searchable index of pages. In 1998, Yahoo! was the most popular starting point for web users.
The recent takedown of Uber and questions about its future by a famous finance professor reminded me that predicting the future is a risky business. As someone who has been wrong… Read more »
Hadoop is a complex technology, so it helps to have friends in high places when you’re trying to develop it and integrate webscale tooling into enterprise environments. For Hortonworks, that friend… Read more »
134 countries have rules mandating the maximum work week: here in the US we do not, and perhaps it is no surprise then that 85.8% of men and 66.5% of women… Read more »
If you’re an avid Flickr (s yhoo) user who prefers to connect via a Google (s goog) or Facebook (s fb) account, your days are officially numbered. Following through on an… Read more »
Mobile advertisers continue to struggle to deliver targeted marketing campaigns in mobile, largely because cookies are much less important on smartphones than on PCs. Verizon recently joined Google, Facebook and others… Read more »
The mobile payment sector is evolving quickly and chaotically, with incumbents and startups competing for not only market share but also the ability to establish the business’ rules and technological standards. Read more »
Hadoop can be an efficient and cost-effective tool for offloading some of the data processing currently done inside the enterprise data warehouse. Read more »
Early Altiscale customers include digital media and advertising companies eager to take advantage of big data but don’t necessarily know a node from a hole in the wall. Read more »
While social media companies seem eager to break their mobile experiences into smaller pieces, there are some risks that could turn off users. Read more »