There has been quite a stir in both Yahoo and MySpace with layoffs and execs calling it quits. Over the weekend another one of MySpace’s execs, its SVP Engineering Allen Hurf made his exit. That wasn’t a call from MySpace but the Hurf seeing the condition at MySpace decided to pack his stuff before he was asked to do so. We aren’t sure why exactly he left the job he had been working at for more than four years but his own tweet states that he might be looking to begin something of his own.
-
-
Recent Entries...
- Update: Mobilink Reveals Its New Identity, Launches A Responsive Website
- Click.to: Your Copy and Paste Shortcut App For The Desktop
- Adzine, A Pakistani Startup Experimenting With What’s Already In The Box
- UpUpStart Announces Epic Skater for Android and iPhone
- Adding Style To Your Pill Cases: Kickstarter’s CapsulePen Raises $15,000
- Chatwing: Expanding the Horizons of Blogging and Internet Marketing
- West vs East Coast Business Swagger
- iPad 3 Released Has 264 PPI Retina Display, Quad Core A5X Chip, 5MP Camera–Just a retuning of The iPad 2
- The iPad 3 Will Have Haptic Feedback And Probably SenSeg Is Behind It
- iPad 3 or As Some Say the iPad HD Releasing on March 16
-
Random Entries...
- ‘Digg’ makes an announcement on ‘Facebook Connect’
- Yahoo thinks it’s doing everything right, Account Optimization goes Automatic
- Motorola DROID 3 Images Leaked, What Is It Made Of?
- Recession? What Recession Signifies the Gaming Industry…
- Facebook Decides To Take Its Engineering Team Outside Palo Alto – Opens Up Seattle Office
-
Popular Tags
acquisition ads Android app apple Apps Ban China Chrome dead facebook funding Gmail google how to iOS iPad iphone iphone 4 iphone 5 ipod touch jailbreak microsoft mobile music myspace Nokia pakistan privacy Reports Rumors search social media social network startup startups tips tool tools Twitter verizon video web yahoo youtube



1 Trackback or Pingback for this entry:
[...] the RSS feed for updates on this topic.Powered by WP Greet Box Wow, its not just the execs that are cut off from the MySpace branches, but so are the products. CEO Owen Van Natta made sure he was vocal about [...]