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(REUTERS) - Microsoft Corp offered to buy Yahoo Inc for $44.6 billion, in a bold bid to transform two ailing Internet businesses into a worthy competitor for market leader Google Inc.
Bị mất Yahoo cũ rồi, có những bạn vừa mới add. Xin lỗi, có gì add lại Yahoo mới này nhé :
wind.luong
- Cám ơn các bạn nhiều !
Press L for large view on black.
Bought this baseball from the Yahoo! company store couple of days back..
Have also recently bought a f/1.8 50mm prime lens which I started trying out today...its just awesome, one of the simplest, yet best lens IMO :)
Its cloudy today and had a bit of a tough time managing the exposure of a brand new white ball in these cloudy conditions... hence the slightly underexposed/ less-bright image...
CONTROLLO QUOTIDIANO DELL' ACCOUNT YAHOO - In Caso Di Intrusione Qui Viene Riportato Il n° IP Dell' Intruso - - - In The Case Of Intrusion , The IP Number Of The Intruder Is Reported Here
www.flickr.com/photos/neelelora/albums
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yahoo's long lease - neon billboard off highway 80 east, near the on-ramp to the bay bridge - soma, san francisco, california (2nd group)
After this years club photographic presentation evening (picked up two trophies :-) ). Took some shots for another comp at work.
©2006 Phillip Nesmith
A Border Patrol agent (member of BORSTAR) watches as Omaha 18 finds a place to land in the borderlands of Arizona.
**This image was published as part of a Yahoo! News interactive feature on immigration**
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As Omaha 18 danced in the hot sky around me my mind and eyes were occupied to full capacity. My eyes darted from the ground and the tracks that we were following to the surrounding terrain looking for people in the scrub, over to Agent S.K., up to the helicopter, then back to the ground. The harsh high desert sun beat down on the back of my neck like a hot steaming towel after a barber shave. We had been walking North for a couple of miles and we had lost and found the trail left by the small group of border crossers about six times. I was beginning to think that the tracks, although fresh were older than we all thought. With the helicopter so far ahead I thought that the crew would see something…or the crossers would be running, and their tracks showed no sign of hast.
Up ahead I saw a large billowing cloud of fine tan/orange dust rise into the air. Omaha 18 had landed ahead of us just short of clump of vegetation. In this area of the country a clump of dense vegetation means the presents of water sometime during the year. Omaha 18 was dropping off the second member of the two-person crew to search the area prior to our arrival. Not having access to the radio I thought that we were getting close. As I walked along I looked at the four to five sets of dusty athletic shoe and boot tracks leading us across the land. My mind wondered about the people that left the tracks and about that face that I might soon be able to put a face to the footprints.
Reaching the vegetation I caught movement out of the corner of my eye to the right. It was the agent that Omaha 18 had dropped off. He waved in our direction and said he had found the tracks over there. We caught up with this agent and we exchanged greetings and we talked about this situation. He said his name was Dave and that he had doubts about how fresh the tracks were. As we walked along I discovered that Dave was with BORSTAR (Border Patrol Search Trauma and Rescue: www.customs.gov/xp/cgov/border_security/border_patrol/bor... ). We walked and chatted, talking about the state of the tracks, the way in which the people seemed to be walking etc. It was decided that Dave would call the helicopter to land and Agent S.K. would be taken back to our truck so that he could move it to a road near by to pick me up.
After Omaha 18 landed, coming in low over the brush, blowing a thing fog of Arizona into the air all of which would seem to find its way into my ears, hair, cloths, camera, and eyes. The smell of the burning aviation fuel, the heat, and the gritty feeling of dirt on my face took me back to Iraq. Agent S.K. climbed into the small cockpit and with an increased whine of the engine and a furious whipping of the air by the rotors Omaha 18 broke free of the chains of gravity, banking to the south.
Dave and I stood talking as we looked at the tracks on the ground. We walked a bit more to the North, as there would be a good amount of time before the truck would be closer. The desert ghost laid their tracks in snaking lines across the Mars like dirt as if walking drunk. Through thick vegetation, then across open ground, up over rocky sections to end up disappearing into a patch of grass. We walked in circles until we found them again. This was the same pattern that we had been following for a few miles. Picking up the trail again as it led across a plane of flat dry dirt I looked to the direction they were going…toward more thick vegetation. My mind had been thinking about how these people had been trying to keep anyone from following them long by trying to leave (or not leave) tracks across all types of terrain. Then suddenly as the tracks went into a tangle of dead and downed mesquite trees, which looked like some military obstacle, it hit me. These people had walked through in the dark! This would put us about 4 hours behind them.
Someone had posted a comment to one of my other border images and asked if the Border Patrol “always gets their man”. I am here to tell you that many get past the efforts of the Border Patrol, which is a testament to the skill of the coyotes and drug runners and the vastness of the Arizona desert.
*** Names and callsigns changed ***
*** See the beginning of the story here: www.flickr.com/photos/visualadventure/241138484/ ***
Full of a little keg of beer, mugs, and t-shirts. I didn't know you could even ship alcohol! Neat!
(Promoting Yahoo's new Open Search platform: developer.yahoo.com/searchmonkey/)
Ohio River
Big Mac Bridge aka Daniel Beard Bridge
The Old Resivoir Pumping Station
Sawyer Point
Cincinnati, Ohio
Two 5 Image HDRs Photomerged
Click on the image till you can view it on black.
For the last month it has done nothing but rain in the Cincinnati area, making the month of April the rainiest on record with nearly 14 inches of rain and the Ohio river has been near or above floodstage for a few weeks now. I'm not sure about a history of the pumphouse ruins in the foreground but they've been here for some time. The golden arches in the background belong to a bridge affectionately referred to by locals as The Big Mac Bridge.
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2013 - The Year in Flickr yhoo.it/1jAUhgd (original link from Yahoo News) 24th Dec 2013 / by Yahoo! Studios .
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YouTube link : www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzAoRM_bufA
with reference to Wikipedia,
Flickr has. . . 87 Million Users and more than 3.5 Million new images uploaded daily.
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Yesterday the Yahoo! executive who reportedly oversaw Flickr , Scott Dietzen, resigned from Yahoo! according to TechCrunch. It was also reported yesterday that Yahoo has now retained Goodby, Silverstein and Partners to somehow try and recover from their failing marketing campaign.
While Yahoo censors paintings of classical nudes from public museums, their employees are off getting public lap dances at Yahoo "Hack Day."
How can Yahoo seriously expect us to accept their $100 million marketing big lie that "the internet is under new management, yours," when they carelessly and maliciously destroy customer data without so much as a warning?
Yahoo's new $100 million marketing campaign should not read "the internet is under new management yours." It should read "the internet is under new management ours."
Until Yahoo learns to respect their users and their user data and embraces true community management rather than community mis-management, their outlandish marketing message will continue to fall on deaf ears.
Here is an open letter I wrote to the head of Yahoo's Marketing efforts, Elisa Steele, regarding these problems.
Flickr and Yahoo sitting in a tree
K-I-S-S-I-N-G
First comes love, then comes marriage
Then comes WHAT THE HELL IS THAT GOD AWFUL LOOKING THING SITTING AT THE TOP OF MY FLICKR PAGE!!!!!!
TechCrunch has a report out on the new Flickr logo that showed up yesterday. For those of you who haven't seen it yet, Flickr tacked on "by Yahoo" at the top of every Flickr page. As you'd suspect, the Flickr Community pretty much unilaterally hates the move. You can read more Flickr Community reaction here in the help forum (where I've seemingly been permanently banned now, despite my letter to Yahoo! Marketing Exec Elise Steele on Monday).
From a design perspective the new logo looks pretty fugly. The colors clash and the Yahoo! part feels pixelated. I think whoever designed it did the scaling wrong on the Yahoo! part. Makes me wonder if someone at Flickr didn't go out of their way to purposely make the new logo look bad as a sort of quiet protest against being made to add it on by their corporate parent.
In terms of why Yahoo! has done this, Heather Champ was the first Flickr employee to speak up officially, suggesting that Yahoo! did this to "quell those weird intermittent stories that bubble up that Yahoo! is on the verge of pulling the plug on the Flickrverse."
Personally I follow Flickr pretty closely and haven't heard any rumors like that, but I suppose that's easier than saying that Yahoo! would like to smack you in the face with their branding every time you look at any page on Flickr. Feels a bit disingenuous to me though.
At least one ex Flickr employee Eric Costello seems to like the new logo piping in that he "loves it." I have a feeling that Costello's being sarcastic though. But maybe not. Costello also suggested that they change the logo to read Flickr loves Yahoo.
Another Flickr user suggested that maybe Yahoo! should change the new logo to Flickr(TM) by Yahoo(TM) with search powered by Bing(TM).
Me personally? I don't really care one way or other. I just wish Flickr would tone down the censorship. It sort of sucks being permanently banned from the Flickr Help Forum and having secret hidden flags put on some of my images to bury them on the site. It feels sort of personal at this point. It also sucks when they delete your friend's accounts from the site.