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WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: Rick-o
Date: December 13, 2011 09:31AM
I feel much dumber after reading this story. eye rolling smiley

Some of the comments were funny though:

Yo dawg, i put Flash in your flash so you can flash while you Flash smiling bouncing smiley

[www.thestreet.com]





“There is no greater calling than to serve your fellow men. There is no greater contribution than to help the weak. There is no greater satisfaction than to have done it well.”

- Walter Reuther
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: Sam3
Date: December 13, 2011 09:42AM
I agree... WOW! eye popping smiley

I've never read anything so horrible wrong and misinformed.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: OWC Jamie
Date: December 13, 2011 09:49AM
Merry Christmas! Here's your pink slip!



Good Luck!
Jamie Dresser
Other World Computing
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 10:05AM
Watch the comments pile up, in real time. This is the best writer-shaming flame-fest I've seen all year!
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: cbelt3
Date: December 13, 2011 10:05AM
Ah, but he "corrected" it ! (One sentence, and left the FAIL)
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: wolfcry911
Date: December 13, 2011 10:07AM
and that's the revised version!
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 10:07AM
Okay anyone want to take bets on how long it takes for the article to disappear? We need to capture the article before it goes down the bunny hole. I am fairly certain its survival is limited to mere minutes.

Someone, grab the article, quick!
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 10:15AM
Antoine Gara is the Deals Reporter on the Financial Services desk for TheStreet. Prior to joining TheStreet, Antoine was an intern at Bloomberg Businessweek magazine after graduating with a master's degree in business and economic journalism from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Prior to moving into journalism, Antoine worked as an analyst in the fixed-income operations of Lehman Brothers and Barclays Capital. He is a graduate of Middlebury College.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 10:24AM
YES! It's been completely gutted, rewritten in a hurry, removing all the misdirected Adobe references. That DID only take a few minutes.

Thank god this is digital, and didn't go to press, with real ink and paper.

I wrote a quick message directly to the writer, suggesting a face-saving quick removal. I'm sure I'm not the only one who wrote directly to Antione.

Maybe he and Jayson Blair can have a beer together.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: Rick-o
Date: December 13, 2011 11:48AM
Quote
guitarist
Okay anyone want to take bets on how long it takes for the article to disappear? We need to capture the article before it goes down the bunny hole. I am fairly certain its survival is limited to mere minutes.

Someone, grab the article, quick!

Here's the article after the first revision. eye rolling smiley

As cbelt said, there is still plenty of fail in it.



Apple Mulling Biggest Deal Since Jobs' 1996 Return: Report (Update 1)

Story updated to reflect difference between flash memory hardware and flash software.


NEW YORK (TheStreet) - Apple(AAPL_) is in talks to buy a flash storage company for mobile products called Anobit Technologies for $400 million to $500 million, Israeli newspaper Calcalist reports.

If a deal were to materialize, it would be Apple's biggest company acquisition since bringing legendary founder Steve Jobs back to the company by buying NeXT Computers in 1996. For a company that's relied on inventing and growing internal products to win consumer loyalty, a flash-storage focused deal could potentially allow for greater data storage on its mobile devices. To be seen is whether Apple will look to correct an oft cited bother of Apple's popular iPhone and iPad products - their inability to handle some Adobe's(ADBE_) Flash program that allows Web users to view applications, pictures and video.

Apple already uses some of the flash product offerings of Herzeliya, Israel -based Anobit, which was founded in June 2006 with $76 million in venture capital raised by Battery Ventures, Pitango Venture Capital, and other strategic investors, according to its Web site. Currently, the company also has 21 memory signal processing-related patents, according to its Web site.

It's unclear whether an Anobit purchase would help solve issues that consumers have with Apple's iPad 2, which gets four out of five stars from CNET editors who cite a lack of Adobe Flash support as a negative to an otherwise "excellent product." That's because Anobit manufactures embedded flash controllers for smartphone and tablet computers, which improve the performance of device flash connectivity and might mesh well with Apple's mobile product data storage needs. However, Anobit doesn't manufacture an alternative to Abobe's Flash software. In November, Adobe announced it discontinue its mobile Flash Player and cut 750 jobs, as consumers trend toward devices reliant on Adobe Air software and HTLM5 technology. Adobe will continue to make Flash Player for Android and Blackberry Devices.

For more on Apple, see TheStreet's 5 Holiday Stock Picks Sure to Please Investors, and Merrill Lynch's 10 Favorite Stocks for 2012.

For Apple, an acquisition would be a rare sight. As part of a consortium of investors including Microsoft(MSFT_), Sony(SNE_), Research In Motion(RIMM_) and EMC(EMC_), Apple acquired patents from bankrupt Nortel in a July deal that totaled $4.5 billion. The consortium beat out Google(GOOG_) in their bid.

Otherwise, the company's biggest merger is a $400 million purchase of NeXT Computers to buy its operating system and bring Steve Jobs back to the company he founded in 1976. Jobs died in October, succumbing to a multi-year battle with pancreatic cancer.

The Cupertino, Calif., -based company now run by chief executive Tim Cook has only cut seventeen deals in its history totaling less than $5 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Currently, Apple sits on $26 billion in cash and short term investments, according its financial statements.






“There is no greater calling than to serve your fellow men. There is no greater contribution than to help the weak. There is no greater satisfaction than to have done it well.”

- Walter Reuther
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 12:01PM
I got this email from the reporter, in response to my email to him:

Thank you. Here's the fully edited version. In quickly reading Anubit's web site I misinterpreted what its business was.

[www.thestreet.com]
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Date: December 13, 2011 01:04PM
I are so confused--as God is my witness, I thought they were the same thing!

Too much brown acid...
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 01:20PM
Whitewashed version online now -- no errors this time, that I can see...



Apple Mulling Biggest Deal Since Jobs' 1996 Return: Report (Update 2)

Story updated to reflect difference between flash memory hardware and flash software.

NEW YORK (TheStreet) - Apple(AAPL_) is in talks to buy a flash storage company for mobile products called Anobit Technologies for $400 million to $500 million, Israeli newspaper Calcalist reports.

If a deal were to materialize, it would be Apple's biggest company acquisition since bringing legendary founder Steve Jobs back to the company by buying NeXT Computers in 1996. For a company that's relied on inventing and growing internal products to win consumer loyalty, a flash-storage focused deal could potentially allow for greater data storage on its mobile devices.


Apple already uses some of the flash product offerings of Herzeliya, Israel -based Anobit, which was founded in June 2006 with $76 million in venture capital raised by Battery Ventures, Pitango Venture Capital, and other strategic investors, according to its Web site. Currently, the company also has 21 memory signal processing-related patents, according to its Web site.

Anobit's attraction for Apple could lie in its manufacture of embedded flash controllers for smartphone and tablet computers, which improve the performance of device flash connectivity. This might mesh well with Apple's mobile product data storage needs.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: GGD
Date: December 13, 2011 01:34PM
Quote
guitarist
Whitewashed version online now -- no errors this time, that I can see...
...

Story updated to reflect difference between flash memory hardware and flash software.

But a surprising admission that the earlier version was very wrong.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: N-OS X-tasy!
Date: December 13, 2011 02:42PM
Quote
GGD
But a surprising admission that the earlier version was very wrong.

Necessary if the author wishes to salvage any pretense of journalistic integrity.



RIP, Greg the DogSitter. You are missed.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: guitarist
Date: December 13, 2011 03:29PM
Quote
N-OS X-tasy!
Quote
GGD
But a surprising admission that the earlier version was very wrong.

Necessary if the author wishes to salvage any pretense of journalistic integrity.

He's a Finance writer, Business degree, probably know a lot of wonky details about banking and finance that would elude most non-finance people. It's not the same thing as being a tech writer or even an average informed consumer of computers and gadgets.

There are brilliant people with Doctorate degree in Science or Law or Medicine who don't know squat about Adobe software names or storage media, their expertise is elsewhere. Not defending bad research and sloppy writing-- he deserved to be hammered-- just playing Devil's Advocate.

To us he looked like a complete moron, but blowing something obvious about tech then correcting it in an hour isn't the end of the world. Deadline writers make and correct mistakes every day.

Reminds me of that old saying:

"The fastest way to find the right answer to something is to post the wrong one on the internet"
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: DaviDC.
Date: December 13, 2011 03:33PM
You people have simply GOT to learn to skim articles & not read them word for word.



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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: GGD
Date: December 13, 2011 03:40PM
Is anyone here in the electronic publishing business? Do the writers send stuff straight to the web without anyone reading it, or are there editors, etc. that approve stuff before it is published. One would thing/hope that there are some sorts of checks and balances.
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Re: WOW!! Clueless Reporter? Tell Me What You Find Wrong With This "Flash" Story
Posted by: N-OS X-tasy!
Date: December 14, 2011 02:47AM
Quote
guitarist
Quote
N-OS X-tasy!
Quote
GGD
But a surprising admission that the earlier version was very wrong.

Necessary if the author wishes to salvage any pretense of journalistic integrity.

He's a Finance writer, Business degree, probably know a lot of wonky details about banking and finance that would elude most non-finance people. It's not the same thing as being a tech writer or even an average informed consumer of computers and gadgets.

There are brilliant people with Doctorate degree in Science or Law or Medicine who don't know squat about Adobe software names or storage media, their expertise is elsewhere. Not defending bad research and sloppy writing-- he deserved to be hammered-- just playing Devil's Advocate.

To us he looked like a complete moron, but blowing something obvious about tech then correcting it in an hour isn't the end of the world. Deadline writers make and correct mistakes every day.

From his "About the author" blurb: [www.thestreet.com]

Antoine Gara is the Deals Reporter on the Financial Services desk for TheStreet. Prior to joining TheStreet, Antoine was an intern at Bloomberg Businessweek magazine after graduating with a master's degree in business and economic journalism from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Prior to moving into journalism, Antoine worked as an analyst in the fixed-income operations of Lehman Brothers and Barclays Capital. He is a graduate of Middlebury College.

He earned a Master's degree in business journalism from the frickin' Columbia School of Journalism - so, yes, I would expect him to bring a measure of journalistic integrity to his business writings.



RIP, Greg the DogSitter. You are missed.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/14/2011 02:47AM by N-OS X-tasy!.
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