A great community of 6000 developers joined forces on the platform, and Wit.ai is already powering hundreds of apps and devices. We gathered an incredible group at our LISTEN conference in November. But we are just scratching the surface of the problem. That is where today’s big news comes in: Wit.ai is joining Facebook!
Auteur/autrice : noflux (Page 309 of 632)
Don’t buy another phone ever again. That’s a weird thing for us to say, right? We’re WIRED!
« According to forecasts from Match.com and Plenty of Fish, two of the country’s largest dating sites, the single most popular time for online dating — the window when the most people sign up, log on and poke around — will be Jan. 4, from roughly 5 to 8 p.m. Zoosk, another data-focused dating site, backs that estimate up; in 2014, it’s most trafficked time was on the Sunday after New Year’s. »
« Welcome puts names to the faces it sees »
Fleur Pellerin lance l’élaboration d’une charte d’engagement des professionnels de la publicité contre les sites illicites…
The reason I respect for-fee services like Spotify is that they are slowly turning people who are used to getting their music for-FREE, into paying ten dollars a month for a subscription model. These payments don’t add up to replacement for income from physical or digital sales at the moment – but I think they can if everyone sits down – record companies, artists and digital services – to figure out a fairer way of doing business.
Waze indique la localisation exacte des radars et les contrôles d’alcoolémie, ce qui est contraire à la réglementation française. Je suis victime de concurrence déloyale
Facebook ne permet plus de partager les “mauvaises” nouvelles à ses amis. Si un utilisateur veut préciser qu’il est divorcé, séparé ou veuf, un message s’affiche automatiquement : “ceci n’apparaîtra pas dans les fils d’actualité”.
« Montblanc e-Strap Combines Smart Wearable Device With Mechanical Watch »
It’s no secret that Facebook can track pretty much every detail about your personal life. But did you know that Happy Fish—a popular kids game based on the Android operating system—might be a worse privacy offender?


