It’s hard to be Huawei in the US already, and under Trump it must be unbearable. Meanwhile, I hear they’re sucking up marketshare elsewhere.
Original source: HPE Denies It’s Partnering with Huawei, Taps Crisis Public Relati
Link: Future of Jakarta Is in the Cloud, Not with the JCP: One-on-One with Mike Milinkovich
“Q: Just to be clear, the Eclipse Jakarta EE Working Group is where the new specification process is going to be managed entirely, and the JCP is out of the picture. Right? A: Right. The JCP is going to continue to exist, of course, but it will be focused entirely on the Java language platform, the JDK, the JRE, that level of the Java technology. The Eclipse Foundation and its members and the Jakarta EE Working Group will define the future evolution of cloud-native Java.
Link: Future of Jakarta Is in the Cloud, Not with the JCP: One-on-One with Mike Milinkovich
“Q: Just to be clear, the Eclipse Jakarta EE Working Group is where the new specification process is going to be managed entirely, and the JCP is out of the picture. Right? A: Right. The JCP is going to continue to exist, of course, but it will be focused entirely on the Java language platform, the JDK, the JRE, that level of the Java technology. The Eclipse Foundation and its members and the Jakarta EE Working Group will define the future evolution of cloud-native Java.
Link: Future of Jakarta Is in the Cloud, Not with the JCP: One-on-One with Mike Milinkovich
“Q: Just to be clear, the Eclipse Jakarta EE Working Group is where the new specification process is going to be managed entirely, and the JCP is out of the picture. Right? A: Right. The JCP is going to continue to exist, of course, but it will be focused entirely on the Java language platform, the JDK, the JRE, that level of the Java technology. The Eclipse Foundation and its members and the Jakarta EE Working Group will define the future evolution of cloud-native Java.
Link: Estimated Nest revenue and losses
“But a one-time accounting change, detailed in Alphabet’s first-quarter results today, reveals that Nest generated $726 million in revenue last year and an operating loss of $621 million.”
Original source: Estimated Nest revenue and losses
Link: Estimated Nest revenue and losses
“But a one-time accounting change, detailed in Alphabet’s first-quarter results today, reveals that Nest generated $726 million in revenue last year and an operating loss of $621 million.”
Original source: Estimated Nest revenue and losses
Link: Estimated Nest revenue and losses
“But a one-time accounting change, detailed in Alphabet’s first-quarter results today, reveals that Nest generated $726 million in revenue last year and an operating loss of $621 million.”
Original source: Estimated Nest revenue and losses
Link: Yahoo! dismemberment! begins! as! Oath! offloads! Flickr!
“Yahoo! acquired Flickr in 2005 and planned to fold it into the Yahoo! Photos service. But the Flickr brand proved more resilient and Yahoo! ended up running it until now, albeit with Yahoo! as the preferred authentication provider. The service has remained popular with photographers, but trails the likes of Facebook and Google in terms of sheer quantity of images stored.”
Original source: Yahoo! dismemberment! begins! as! Oath! offloads! Flickr!
Link: Yahoo! dismemberment! begins! as! Oath! offloads! Flickr!
“Yahoo! acquired Flickr in 2005 and planned to fold it into the Yahoo! Photos service. But the Flickr brand proved more resilient and Yahoo! ended up running it until now, albeit with Yahoo! as the preferred authentication provider. The service has remained popular with photographers, but trails the likes of Facebook and Google in terms of sheer quantity of images stored.”
Original source: Yahoo! dismemberment! begins! as! Oath! offloads! Flickr!
Link: Yahoo! dismemberment! begins! as! Oath! offloads! Flickr!
“Yahoo! acquired Flickr in 2005 and planned to fold it into the Yahoo! Photos service. But the Flickr brand proved more resilient and Yahoo! ended up running it until now, albeit with Yahoo! as the preferred authentication provider. The service has remained popular with photographers, but trails the likes of Facebook and Google in terms of sheer quantity of images stored.”
Original source: Yahoo! dismemberment! begins! as! Oath! offloads! Flickr!