Facebook employees are in disbelief | Mark Zuckerberg Distrust on his employee

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has since said the Bosworth memo was “one that most people at Facebook including myself disagreed with strongly,” describing his longtime deputy as a “talented leader who says many trusted things.”

Bosworth, a vice president at Facebook who’s known as Boz, wrote in June 2016, that hacking on face book for the improvement of company is good but in case of terrorism of Leaking of data we will not bear it.

“Dozens of employees criticized the unknown leakers at the company. ‘Leakers, please resign instead of sabotaging the company,’ one wrote in a comment under Bosworth’s post. Wrote another: ‘How fucking terrible that some irresponsible jerk decided he or she had some god complex that jeopardizes our inner culture and something that makes Facebook great?'”
Here’s where the discussion gets conspiratorial:

“Another theory floated by multiple employees is that Facebook has been targeted by spies or state-level actors hoping to embarrass the company. ‘Keep in mind that leakers could be intentionally placed bad actors, not just employees making a one-off bad decision,’ one wrote. ‘Thinking adversarially, if I wanted info from Facebook, the easiest path would be to get people hired into low-level employee or contract roles.’ Another wrote: ‘Imagine that some percentage of leakers are spies for governments. A call to morals or problems of performance would be irrelevant in this case, because dissolution is the intent of those actors. If that’s our threat — and maybe it is, given the current political situation? — then is it even possible to build a system that defaults to open, but that is able to resist these bad actors (or do we need to redesign the system?)'”
It’s hard to tell how most Facebook employees — not just the loudest — feel about Bosworth’s positions, and it’s possible that these threads were taken out of context. That’s Bosworth’s explanation for what was said in the memo, which BuzzFeed published in full.


Apple’s 9.7-inch iPad With Apple Pencil Support Launching Next Week Rumors Techtificator Updates

Apple is said to be introducing a new iPad tablet next week. The iOS device, famed to feature a 9.7-inch screen, will reportedly have support for Apple Pencil because it probably says that it would be used in the education sector. 
Apple Insider reported Friday that it has seen a new research note from KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo(The Most Accurate Apple Analyst in the World” Ming-Chi Kuo), saying a new iPad is set for launch at Apple’s upcoming education-centric “Field Trip” event on March 27, Tuesday, at Lane Tech College Prep High School in Chicago, Illinois. Kuo is expecting very strong demand for the new tablet that’s banking on Apple Pencil compatibility to attract buyers in the educational and commercial markets. 
Techtificitor assumed that 9.7-inch iPad is reportedly an affordable entry despite having support for the Apple Pencil peripheral. The Most Accurate Apple Analyst in the World” Ming-Chi Kuo also predicts the device could account for 70 percent of iPad sales this year. In effect, this could also increase the sales of Apple Pencil and boost the bottom lines of suppliers Compal, Unimicron, Unitech and Simplo.

The Most Accurate Apple Analyst in the World” Ming-Chi Kuo


Apple Pencil is a peripheral that serves as a drawing and writing tool for compatible Apple devices. The $99 device features advanced sensors for tilt and pressure sensitivity, allowing it to work just like a real pencil. Previous reports speculated that a new Apple Pencil could be in the works and that the next-generation peripheral could have a magnetic system, which would allow it to easily attach to the side of an iPad.  

Apple is going back to its roots by introducing a new low-cost iPad for the education sector. The event next Tuesday will mark the first time that the Cupertino giant is unveiling a new product designed for the educational market since 2012 when the company introduced a designing tool for its famous tablet series, as pointed out by Bloomberg
Bloomberg L.P. is a privately held financial software, data, and media company headquartered in Midtown Manhattan, New York City


Aside from having Apple Pencil support, the new iPad — expected to be the cheapest tablet from Apple yet — is goin
g to come with a new software for the classroom, people familiar with the matter said on condition users. There are no specific details about the software available as of late. Apple also declined to confirm the existence of the software. 

It appears Apple is once again determined to conquer the educational market after seeing the success of Google and Microsoft in the recent years. The other two companies have established their presence in the academic community by offering inexpensive laptops and tablets. Apple now wants to clinch the same success by targeting students and teachers alike with its new iPad.