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Search resuls for: "Internet Hall of Fame"


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Daniel C. Lynch, a computer network engineer whose exhibitions on networking equipment helped accelerate the commercialization of the internet in the 1980s and ’90s, died on Saturday at his home in St. Helena, Calif. His death was confirmed by his daughter Julie Lynch-Sasson, who said he had been suffering from kidney failure. In the mid-1980s, when the internet was still the domain of academia and the government, Mr. Lynch was a computer facility manager who played a key role in the early years of data networking. Although the internet was very small and restricted to noncommercial use, Mr. Lynch was convinced of its ultimate commercial potential. Image Daniel C. Lynch in an undated photograph.
Persons: Daniel C, Lynch, Julie Lynch, Sasson, Ziff Davis, Organizations: Cisco Systems, Sun Microsystems, of Fame Locations: St . Helena, Calif
"Need to reach positive cash flow before we have the luxury of anything else," Musk wrote in response to a tweet. Musk took over Twitter in October of last year in a deal valued at around $44 billion, including about $13 billion in debt. He also claimed at that time that the company was "roughly breakeven," and expected to become cash flow positive within the next quarter. A number of widely followed accounts on Twitter posted that they were dismayed they did not qualify to earn income from the program yet. It's not clear how much Twitter paid creators in total in this first round of payments.
Persons: Elon Musk, Porte, Alain JOCARD, ALAIN JOCARD, Musk, Linda Yaccarino, Comcast's NBCUniversal, NBCUniversal, Twitter, Andrew Tate —, Tate, influencers, Omar Qazi, Sawyer Merritt, Brian, Ed Krassenstein Organizations: SpaceX, Twitter, Porte de, Getty, BBC, CNBC, Internet Hall of Fame, of, X Corp Locations: Paris, AFP, Romania
Am account that reposts viral posts is among the big beneficiaries of Twitter's new monetization scheme. The "Internet Hall of Fame" account appears to have netted $100,000 from the scheme. Musk previously said that accounts based on "theft" of others' post would not get paid. The "internet hall of fame" account, which has 1.9 million followers and describes itself as highlighting the "best of the internet," in a screenshot Thursday was shown to have been paid $107,247.00. He didn't define exactly what he meant by "theft of posts," and it isn't totally clear whether Internet Hall of Fame would meet that definition.
Persons: Oliver Alexander, Elon Musk, Oliver, Musk, Andrew Tate, Twitter Organizations: of Fame, Morning, Twitter, Copyright, Washington Post
Paul Vixie, a high-profile Amazon VP, told employees to be patient and wait for more details about the new return-to-office mandate. Amazon employees are furious about the new mandate which requires them to be in the office three days a week starting in May. A high-profile Amazon executive joined an internal Slack conversation on Tuesday as employee angst over the sudden return-to-office mandate intensified. It also shows how Amazon's return-to-office mandate was not widely shared even among the highest-ranked employees prior to its announcement on Friday. Many employees in the Slack channel expressed frustration over the abruptness and vagueness of Jassy's announcement.
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