Facebook Blogged

Offtopic :: Gifts Ideas for Festival Season

At Facebookblogged.com, we’re always looking to make your experience interactive and healthy. Whether it is something out of Facebook.com’s interest we do make it a mention. Today, we’re talking about lot at gift ideas for your Christmas season.

If you are fan of stylish European furniture then do check-out the lovely range from LOMBOK. Lombok is an excellent store providing you access to quality bedside tables, side tables, daybeds, drawers, wardrobes and cushions etc.

This London based store has an amazingly broad collection of furniture, lightning, accessories and special gifts for Christmas. In lightning they have lamp shade, lamps, candles and windlights.

They have some excellent lamp shades and have some nice price ranges from 11 Euros.
In accessories they have baskets, photo-frames, trays, mirrors etc. Again these are quite decently priced. Overall the package is nicely bundled.

Typically these accessories are there for your home-use purposes. For example if you want to sit in-front of TV and have a nice cheesy meal, this is the place for you ? Another example that we have is that of cushions, which are great for sleeping with comfort level. In addition, the next category is that of

Facebook a source of Viral Marketing

Apple and Facebok

Mobile Phone

The ad, which began airing on network television Tuesday evening, features a close-up of the iPhone browsing the Facebook website while a narrator presents a voiceover.

“If you love Facebook so much that you check it every time that you’re at the computer, just think about how great it would be to check it every time you’re nowhere near your computer,” the narrator says. “Right on your phone.”

Meanwhile, a second spot dubbed “Cars,” touts the advantages of having the internet in your pocket when negotiating to purchase a new car and wanting to check out prices on Kelly Blue Book before striking a deal.

“Say you’re out shopping for a car, and the salesman says, ‘this is the best deal in town, guaranteed.’ Sounds good,” the narrator says. “But say you want a second opinion. That’s when having the entire internet on your phone sounds even better.”

The two new ads aired by Apple since the handset went on sale late last June. If you have yet to see the new iPhone Ads put out by Apple a few days ago, then take a look at them here. The first advertises the use of Facebook on the iPhone. It states: Two new advertising spots for Apple watchers to check out have been posted to Apple’s Web site, entitled “Facebook” and “Cars.” Both were designed to promote the iPhone as a Web surfing device. The “Facebook” ad reaches out to fans of the social networking service. “If you love Facebook so much that you check it every time you’re near the computer, just think about how great it would be to check it, well, every time you’re nowhere near the computer,” says the narrator.The “Cars” ad demonstrates the benefits of being able to surf the Web from the iPhone when shopping for an automobile. The user looks up the price of a car he’s interested in on the Kelley Blue Book Web site to make sure he’s getting a good deal.

We hope the creators of this application of FaceBook are ready. FaceBook has been known to experience down time in the past when third party applications or popular FaceBook features become suddenly popular. FaceBook has become as seemingly graphics and application heavy as MySpace lately, and I find the iPhone interface refreshing even on a regular browser as a break from all the visual noise. We may find us browsing the page in iPhone format more often just to give our eyes a break.

Internet vs media

app In Canada, there’s something called the Youth Criminal Justice Act (YCJA), which prohibits the publication of information by any means. Then if a minor is the victim of a crime, then the media can’t run around saying the minor’s name. We have something similar here in the US and until recently, it’s usually been followed by most media outlets. That is, until the Internet came around. A young girl in Toronto, named Stefanie Rengel, was brutally stabbed by two fellow teens on New Years Day for reasons that are yet unknown. In Stefanie’s case, that’s exactly what happened, as multiple “tribute” groups were created in her memory. People wanted to show their support for her and remember her life together, but what they were inadvertently doing was breaking the YCJA by “reporting” on her death. People are on the Internet more and more and we’re getting our news from it now more than ever in the past. What happens when somebody breaks a gag order by posting about something on their Facebook page? Or writing about it on their blog or away message? What I feel is that this is not the breaking of the law as I think we need to check what kind of the reporting has been done on net by the people. Since it was just a tribute to a girl and just to make the haunting issue alive in public I feel that this should not be a big problem. There was nothing written which was against her personality or which can hurt her image this should not be taken as an issue by the media rather they should support these kinds of deeds which can help to stop these kinds of episodes in future .

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