Because via super shares he controls and will control the majority of voting rights. Which will be really interesting if at some point this will stop being OK with investors, like for example right now…That is a lot of lost value.
Makes me wonder how Zuck hasn't been voted out of the leadership of Meta.
Yeah but they are fleeing to places. Meta is trying to be the place they flee to after that.Metaverse solves absolutely nothing, and people are fleeing from Instagram and Facebook. Whatsapp is hard to monetize. So what is there anymore?
I think this MetaVR is double edge sword.
Right now, its bleeding money. But if its hits a success, I can see it recovering that money fast.
You dont need a high quality games.VR competitors like Valve and Sony have as good or better R&D in hardware, software and distribution platforms. Sony and Valve also dominate the 1st adopting market that will be gamers. Meta still can't make a game like Alyx.
US had 2.6% growth last quarter, that’s pretty solid and makes up for the slight contraction of the quarter before…Great economy we’ve got going.
It's not just Meta. The entire tech portfolio is down big time.US had 2.6% growth last quarter, that’s pretty solid and makes up for the slight contraction of the quarter before…
Meta sucking ass is because Meta sucks ass
That’s not really a good indicator of the overall economic situation though. The stock market has been juiced for years. There’s no way those companies were worth what they were trading at.It's not just Meta. The entire tech portfolio is down big time.
From MS to Tesla to everything in between, have had massive 100's a billions in market share loss.
We are in a recession. Only thing that changed is the definition, "ironically."That’s not really a good indicator of the overall economic situation though. The stock market has been juiced for years. There’s no way those companies were worth what they were trading at.
I know everyone is anticipating a recession but it’s not here yet and if it does come, it’s probably not going to be some sort of disaster. We’re still at 3.5% unemployment…I dunno, I graduated right before the Great Recession and remember the bad times and even with inflation, this ain’t the bad times
How so? A recession has always been two straight quarters of GDP contraction. We had 2.6% growth this last quarter. How does that qualify as a recession?We are in a recession. Only thing that changed is the definition, "ironically."
We had those two straight quarters already, and they denied the recession then. Inflation is through the roof, markets are contracting, industries are suffering, we have 25 days of diesel reserves left. Buckle up, winter has the potential to be brutal.How so? A recession has always been two straight quarters of GDP contraction. We had 2.6% growth this last quarter. How does that qualify as a recession?
I know everyone believes it’s coming, including my bosses, but it’s not here yet.
They redesigned the look of it years ago, but somehow its still the same ultra bland looking interface like it's posts and pics in MS Excel without the gridlines and a lot of blue buttons or trim because that's their corporate colours.Never used facebook in my life. It looked old as hell back then and even older compared to other site and services now.
Well everyone's referring to the "looming" or "coming" recession, including the business leaders I work with...certainly there are other concerns on the horizon as well, but a recession refers to GDP growth or contraction. Inflation does not indicate a recession, in fact it's kind of the opposite. Individual markets expand and contract, but the GDP number is an indication of overall performance. Fuel prices remain a problem, but again that's sort of an indication that things are going well if the demand is there. I don't think anyone was celebrating the negative cost of oil during 2020 due to the global economy screeching to a halt. Housing prices are coming down because the cost of money is going up, probably back to where it should be to keep the market from getting overheated.We had those two straight quarters already, and they denied the recession then. Inflation is through the roof, markets are contracting, industries are suffering, we have 25 days of diesel reserves left. Buckle up, winter has the potential to be brutal.
Every younger person i know is obsessed with Tik Tok. Don't ask me why.Metaverse solves absolutely nothing, and people are fleeing from Instagram and Facebook. Whatsapp is hard to monetize. So what is there anymore?
And their parent company just so happens to have an Oculus rival. They are at least taking the Meta thing semi seriously.Every younger person i know is obsessed with Tik Tok. Don't ask me why.
But you can already do online lessons with people. It's called a conference call with audio and video with real people.
Chinese PsyOps, hopefully the US bans them soon.Every younger person i know is obsessed with Tik Tok. Don't ask me why.
Imagine all the delicious possibilities of further surveillance by the Chinese government.And their parent company just so happens to have an Oculus rival. They are at least taking the Meta thing semi seriously.
It just adds real life stakes when you are playing Winnie the Pooh VR.Imagine all the delicious possibilities of further surveillance by the Chinese government.
No wonder, if this is their vision of “office of the future”:
Bro, you just said that two quarters of GDP contraction is a recession. We just had that before the growth quarter and they denied it being a recession. The growth still didn't bounce back from the two negative quarters. Inflation is through the roof. You may be comfortable now, and that's great, but millions are struggling worse than they have been in quite some time. Things aren't getting any cheaper for them, from utilities, to gas to groceries, etc..Well everyone's referring to the "looming" or "coming" recession, including the business leaders I work with...certainly there are other concerns on the horizon as well, but a recession refers to GDP growth or contraction. Inflation does not indicate a recession, in fact it's kind of the opposite. Individual markets expand and contract, but the GDP number is an indication of overall performance. Fuel prices remain a problem, but again that's sort of an indication that things are going well if the demand is there. I don't think anyone was celebrating the negative cost of oil during 2020 due to the global economy screeching to a halt. Housing prices are coming down because the cost of money is going up, probably back to where it should be to keep the market from getting overheated.
The economy certainly isn't perfect, and it never is. But the doom and gloom around it seems excessive. We just shut down the global economy and then turned it back on, and the biggest war since WWII is raging in Europe right now. Some bumps like sky high inflation aren't unexpected. But overall, it's sort of remarkable things are moving along as well as they are. Except for the lack of real AAA games coming out this year
I think you're right that Q1-Q2 would be called a recession based on the definition of recession. It would be the shortest and mildest possible, but technically still a recession. But I think you're incorrect about the Q3 numbers not making up for it, and we're still not seeing massive layoffs and skyrocketing unemployment or anything like that.Bro, you just said that two quarters of GDP contraction is a recession. We just had that before the growth quarter and they denied it being a recession. The growth still didn't bounce back from the two negative quarters. Inflation is through the roof. You may be comfortable now, and that's great, but millions are struggling worse than they have been in quite some time. Things aren't getting any cheaper for them, from utilities, to gas to groceries, etc..
I'll just leave this here...