
Emotion Measurement Is the New Black
Affectiva's technology, Affdex, can also be used to study emotional responses of consumers as they try out new products or try new business software.

Editorial Team, Everything-PR
The Everything-PR Editorial Team produces reporting, research, and analysis across thirty verticals — communications, reputation, AI visibility, public affairs, media systems, and digital discovery in the answer-engine era. Publishing since 2009.

Affectiva's technology, Affdex, can also be used to study emotional responses of consumers as they try out new products or try new business software.

The public doesn't really care about the act behind the camera - naked or dressed up, Kim Kardashian is losing momentum.

The web commemorated the Challenger disaster today as well, with people from all over the world searching for information on the matter. History is kept alive within many social media hubs.

Toyota announced today a voluntary recall involving approximately 245,000 2006 through 2007 Lexus GS300/350, 2006 through early 2009 Lexus IS250, and 2006 through early 2008 Lexus IS350 vehicles sold in the U.S.

Goldman Sachs and other investors want you to believe Facebook is valued at $50 billion. But somehow the numbers and the news just don't add up. Scientists at hakia launched a stock analysis tool two weeks ago called SENSEnews which indicates Facebook's value at only $14 billion. Or about the same earnings to value ration as Microsoft and other successful companies. Why does Goldman want you to believe the $50 billion number? That should be painfully obvious by now.

Are new wiki-like question-and-answers sites the next big thing on the Internet? Personally, I doubt their success, and here are some arguments.

Qwiki, an invitation-only alpha startup, announced today that it closed $8 million in Series A funding.

More than 84.6 percent of the U.S. Internet audience viewed online video, and video ads accounted for 16.4 percent of all videos viewed.

HTML should just be HTML with no number attached to it Ian Hickson, the specification editor from WHATWG argued.

Walmart will announce a five-year plan on Thursday to make thousands of its packaged foods lower in unhealthy salts, fats and sugars, and to drop prices on fruits and vegetables.
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