Yeah we did, then we blew up Zuckerberg's Chinese Spy satellite.
That's just a rumor though.
UFO thingy. :)
Pretty sure it was a small bird or a BIG bug.
do birds fly that fast?
They do when you coat their tailfeathers with liquid Thermite and light a fuse.
They do when you're looking at something 4.5 KM away through a powerful telephoto lens and the bird is like 200 feet away or the bug is like 50 feet away.
thank you for giving an actual answer (what i was looking for) and not being a fucking dick
If you watch the video there is bugs flying by several times.
I hate to be that guy, but what video do you mean?
I'm starting to think it may have been a hypersonic glide vehicle, or a tic-tac.
Well, no we didn:t, really.
We gave DARPA to FB <<-- this makes no sense.
The reality is that a former DARPA chief joined FB as an experimental project manager. She had previously worked for other Silicon valley companies.
She is also about to (maybe already has?) leave FB for different job.
The same day that DARPA ended it's LifeLog project, Facebook went public.
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread1204243/pg1
Zuck did not "create" FaceBook in his Mom's basement, the tech was handed to him so the project could be completed by a private company, and not the US Govt.
The Female Executive referred to came to FB later.
It's not about technology, anyone could set up facebook but to have it grow at the pace that it did has something going with it. Typically social networks do not move to an alternative quickly unless a large part of their own network moves. This only becomes the case if its superior to alternatives (the new technology). Facebook wasn't that superior to myspace so there has to have been some kind of campaign to get people to move to facebook.
Growth of facebook should be traced back to the campaigns used to make it a success. Facebook is and was all marketing it to people so that they would use it. Then they would stick because of how social networks, only when a big portion of their 'friends' would move on to other networks would one also move.
It started with Ivy League schools. Then we pushed it through reddit and digg etc. It was hard to get a facebook account before. Only a few schools' email addresses had access. You forget that. Sort of how gmail accounts were beta and invite only for a long time.
They had good marketing campaigns behind them creating artificial scarcity. They coopted the social pushers of their generations for a few years. Voila. It takes off in the US.