Comments on: Jobs Keynote crashes the blogosphere
Liveblogging sites around the Web don't work under onslaught of millions of fanboys.
Liveblogging sites around the Web don't work under onslaught of millions of fanboys.
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Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
These platforms need to tested until they are bullet-proof, which, unfortunately, requires humans to spend days trying to break them, and logging how they did do!
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ArsTechnica also did well, despite manual refresh.
I saw in my local newspaper the following morning how This Year's Big Deal is a thin laptop with no CD/DVD drive. I guess users have to install or back up everything over wireless LAN connection. Do I have the gist of it? Hmmm. No liveblogs at all.
I guess I'm just a little confused why Apple doesn't offer a live feed? I would much rather watch the live event straight from Apple, or one of their sub-sites, then tune in to get pop-up video style running commentary from C/NET or MacRumors or others?
Sachin
- by nawckz January 18, 2008 5:36 AM PST
- AJAX does help significantly in reducing hits and improving the experience, but when you're dealing with tens or hundreds of thousands of people the server infrastructure is probably even more important - a great AJAX site will still fail if the servers aren't up to the job.
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