Jokes16 mins ago
Biggest Clanger of the year?
Facebook could have been sold to Google for $5billion. He decided to say NO. Now Google have brought out their own version Google+ and will be in competition with Facebook. Has Mark Zuckerbberg made an enormous mistake?
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No best answer has yet been selected by rov1100. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.well google+ hasnt exactly taken off... most people have joined... then never bothered with it...
if you didnt have yo wait for an invite to join they may have done better - shot themselves in the foot with that little policy - i think it just irritated people rather than made them excited to join...
there is nothing new abotu google +
myspace tried to be more like FB for a while, but it didnt really catch on... there are all sorts of others that havent really caught on either, like bebo and tagged etc
so no i dont think he has made mistake - unless he only wanted the $5 billion
if you didnt have yo wait for an invite to join they may have done better - shot themselves in the foot with that little policy - i think it just irritated people rather than made them excited to join...
there is nothing new abotu google +
myspace tried to be more like FB for a while, but it didnt really catch on... there are all sorts of others that havent really caught on either, like bebo and tagged etc
so no i dont think he has made mistake - unless he only wanted the $5 billion
Google+ will not get ant significant traction because it does not offer anything new. Apple also tried to replicate facebook by adding social media to iTunes. iTunes is hugely popular because it powers iPods and iPhones but its add on social media, called Ping was a huge flop. I think Google+ will be the same.
Not selling facebook is probably quite astute. The fact that bigger firms are trying to steal the idea, and failing will only make it more alluring to investors or rivals.
Not selling facebook is probably quite astute. The fact that bigger firms are trying to steal the idea, and failing will only make it more alluring to investors or rivals.
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