video://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yKVJonslBk
Email bombs: the fastest way to make everybody hate you. Have fun.
Out for a little online revenge? Learn how to create an email bomb to flood someone’s mailbox with useless mail using Yahoo alerts.
Here’s a wrap-up of Web 2.0 news and howtos for today from our .Net blog:
If you haven’t seen the deer killed by Google van, please do so. You can now use Nota to remix your videos, images into a webpage.
Check out Google, Yahoo, AOL, and Microsoft’s 2008 revenues.
Do you use Safari to surf the web? There’s a Safari Browser Plugin that can help you search faster called, inquisitor, recently acquired by Yahoo.
Yahoo acquires Inquisitor, a Safari Browser Plug-in. Safari is the default browser on MACs but you can download it for PC too.
I find that Safari is actually a pretty good browser, a lot better than IE7. I lik
Google and Yahoo has just launched GooHoo, a search engine composed of Google and Yahoo! (I am dead serious!)
Google (NSDQ: GOOG) co-founder Sergey Brin recently said, “We have been talking to Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) and we are very excited to be working with them.” The goal? Tie the two companies into an advertising powerhouse…
Lol… Google doesn’t care about Mexican people?
Well… that might be over-analysis. Did you know that 5/5 is also Children’s Day in Korea?
With the high number of Latino community, I believe Google could have easily given their custom graphics to celebrate the 5/5 day.
Oh well, every day is a new day. The richer get richer, the poorer get poorer, doesn’t that ring a bell in the Web2.0 world?
Ask.com bungled the spelling of Cinco de Mayo, but at
Lol…it looks like Yahoo is trying to get a share of the social networking market. Check out Yahoo Buzz, it could create a lot of traffic for your site if you become a publisher.
Check out the About page, sorta very similar to Digg huh? Remember AOL try to do the same thing with Netscape? I think Yahoo would do a little better, possible better than Digg. With all the black market for Diggs,
Here’s some hackers auctioning off FTP passwords of top 100 sites on Alexa.
The software uses an eBay-like trading interface to qualify the stolen accounts in terms of the country where the server is located and the Google page ranking of the compromised server. Cybercriminals use the information to set a price for the compromised FTP credentials so they can be resold to other cybercriminals or adjust an attack on more prominent sites. The software also allows cybercriminals to use the FTP credentials to automatically inject HTML IFrame tags into Web pages on the compromised se
This post was guest-blogged by Adriaan from i am jack’s design. (Send your guest blog posts to guest@zedomax.com to get them published for free)