enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Friendster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendster

    Friendster's rapid success inspired a generation of niche social networking websites, including Dogster and Elfster. [13] [14] Friendster had also received competition from all-in-one sites such as Windows Live Spaces, Yahoo! 360, and Facebook. Google offered $30 million to buy out Friendster in 2003, but the offer was turned down. [15]

  3. Roblox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roblox

    Roblox is an online game platform and game creation system built around user-generated content and games, [1] [2] officially referred to as "experiences". [3] Games can be created by any user through the platform's game engine, Roblox Studio, [4] and then shared to and played by other players. [1]

  4. Jonathan Abrams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Abrams

    Google offered to buy the company in 2003 for $30 million in Google stock (about 200 million shares) before Google had IPO'd in 2005. That stock would have been worth $30 billion as of March 2021, but the offer was denied. [8] Friendster was then funded by Kleiner Perkins and Benchmark with a valuation of $53 million in October 2003. In 2004 ...

  5. List of Google Easter eggs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Google_Easter_eggs

    Around February 8, the launch day of Google Maps [155] Dressed as a birthday cake [156] For Google Street View's 10th birthday & for the user's birthday As if he is celebrating a birthday, wearing a red and white striped miniature party hat and holding three pastel violet, pink, and blue balloons in his right hand.

  6. Tom Anderson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Anderson

    Anderson's father was an entrepreneur. [5] As a teenager at San Pasqual High in Escondido, California, Anderson was a computer hacker under the pseudonym "Lord Flathead" (friends with Bill Landreth), and prompted a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) raid after he hacked into a computer system at Chase Manhattan Bank.

  7. Social network aggregation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_network_aggregation

    Social network aggregation is the process of collecting content from multiple social network services into a unified presentation. Examples of social network aggregators include Hootsuite or FriendFeed, which may pull together information into a single location [1] or help a user consolidate multiple social networking profiles into a single profile.

  8. Birthday problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_problem

    The basic problem considers all trials to be of one "type". The birthday problem has been generalized to consider an arbitrary number of types. [20] In the simplest extension there are two types of people, say m men and n women, and the problem becomes characterizing the probability of a shared birthday between at least one man and one woman ...

  9. Browser extension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_extension

    A browser extension is a software module for customizing a web browser.Browsers typically allow users to install a variety of extensions, including user interface modifications, cookie management, ad blocking, and the custom scripting and styling of web pages.