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Home » Archives for Natasha Thakkar

Is Facebook Infecting Your Computer?

May 23rd, 2010
Silicon Valley
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Natasha Thakkar

If you think “Jane Found a Happy Brown Cow on Your Farm” is frustrating spam, think again. With over 6,000,000 members, the Facebook group, “I don’t care about your farm, or your fish, or your park, or your mafia!” Shows first-hand just how tired people are of a type social media spam. But maybe this isn’t the spam they should be worrying about! I was tipped off about the latest Facebook spam scam by a friend’s panicked e-mail:

“I thought I’d ask you because you’re quite tech-savvy and a social networking expert! I got a Facebook virus that showed up on my wall as though it were a wallpost by my friend. It read: “This is without a doubt the hottest video ever :p :p :p” and was followed by a link to a supposed video titled “Optical Illusion”. I thought my friend was playing a prank of some sort, so I clicked on the link. When it asked me to download something, I thought it seemed fishy and backed out without downloading. But the same message is being posted on some of my friends’ walls as though it’s from me. Unfortunately, I don’t even know which friends are receiving it, so I’ve been randomly checking people’s walls! I’m currently running a virus scan on my computer. I just wanted to give you a heads up so you don’t click on it too!”

My friend’s profile was one of 300,000 infected that day, but she has no plans of leaving Facebook anytime soon. As one of the leading social networking sites with over 400 million people worldwide and growing, it is almost impossible to leave Facebook. Trust me. I tried. I cancelled my Facebook on September 13, 2008 and ended up reactivating on January 5, 2010. Now with Facebook integrating its “like” buttons across thousands of websites, it is almost necessary to have an account. So how do we protect our computer from getting infected?

A new book, “How to Stop E-mail Spam, Spyware, Malware, Computer Viruses, and Hackers from Ruining Your Computer or Network: The Complete Guide for Your Home and Work,” by Bruce C. Brown teaches users how to combat the billion-dollar risk of incursive software infecting your home and work computers. It gives you a thorough understanding of what you are up against on the wild online frontier, as Brown teaches you why viruses and spam are prevalent on the Internet and delves into the mindset of the spammer, as well as the goals behind these attacks and ways to prevent them.

Protecting our computer from social media spam and computer viruses is one thing, but what about protecting our privacy? The new Facebook updates have many up in arms and threatening to leave Facebook. There is even a scheduled “Quit Facebook Day” on May 31, 2010. Though there is no full-proof answer yet, one thing I have done is checked my profile against www.reclaimprivacy.org.

How many of you were affected by the recent Facebook virus? And do any of you plan to participate in the great Facebook walkout on May 31? Why or why not? I am curious. Sound off below!

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Posted in Silicon Valley | 1 Comment »

Silly Bird! Twitter is for Girls!

March 16th, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

Or is it? According to Michael Wolff, contributing editor at Vanity Fair Magazine, “An (anonymous) person from the high media stratosphere who asks to be identified only as “a friend” offers the following hypothesis: The Twitter demographic skews notably female.”

It is an interesting hypothesis and reminds me of a post I wrote earlier here on Girls in Tech (see post “As the World Wide Web Turns”). There have been many demographic studies about who uses social media sites more actively and it always has been predominantly women on sites like Facebook and mainly men on sites like Digg (recently redesigned fyi). Women have always been the more “social” sex and now that has translated onto the online world and women-centric brands are cashing in. In my opinion Twitter has essentially become the new “radio” where people follow companies and brands to participate in giveaways and attempt to be the “1,000th” follower to win instead of being the “1,000th caller.” And stay-at-home mothers and those working from home are the ones who participate the most in these contests so it is not surprise that they are quickly becoming tech-savvy to cash in on the twitter promotions.

Wolff states that Twitter has a “dear diary” quality to it that makes it unique and therefore attracts more women than men. He goes on to further state those men who do keep diaries use it not as a place to emotionally vent, but rather as a place to keep track of facts: names, dates, people, places. Sounds a lot like the “little black book” doesn’t it? And which man doesn’t keep one of those? There are even “Black Book” applications tailored towards men in the iPhone app store.

Enter geo-location applications. If men use twitter and other social networking sites to tell people about places like Wolff says, does this mean they are the main users of geo-location apps like Foursquare and Gowalla? And are they more likely to let Twitter post their location information? I turned to my Facebook and Twitter to check out if this was indeed true and from what I gathered, it is. Most of my male friends tweet things like “Good morning”, “I am at Starbucks (insert link via foursquare)” and it goes on and on. At the end of the day I can tell exactly where my guy friends were during the day. My girl friends on the other hand tend to tweet things like “p.s. eff my life because my horoscope on Yahoo! Is true.” Additionally, my Facebook news feed is filled with things like “John* has checked into ____” via foursquare or pictures to things they’ve seen throughout their day posted via iPhone (posters in a subway on a commute to work, etc.) Whereas girls will post news links, quotes, and “I heart Chuck Bass” in reference to the Gossip Girls episode from last night.

So is twitter the new diary? Are people micro-venting? Perhaps a dear twitter” column is in order…
Read the entire article here

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Posted in San Francisco | No Comments »

Connecting Women Around the World for Continuous Conversation

March 10th, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

The world found it’s first computer engineer woman in Ada Lovelace during the mid 19th century and its first geek doll in Mattel’s Computer Engineer Barbie announced this past month. However, centuries later there is still plenty that still needs to be done to change the assumption that engineering is a “male profession” around the world.

Through mentoring, education, and outreach to young girls and women, the National Engineers Week Foundation addresses this gender imbalance. One of the Foundation’s premiere events, the Global Marathon, speaks directly to the next generation of women engineers. Set to begin at noon (EDT) on March 10, 2010 and running continuously for 24 hours through noon (EDT) on March 11, the 6th annual Global Marathon, with the theme of “Launching Tomorrow,” provides a unique opportunity for young women engineers across six continents, as well as for middle- school, high-school and university students.

Through continuous conversation, these aspiring professionals will be able to chat about careers and experiences while networking with some of the planet’s most interesting women in engineering and technology. Empowered by the knowledge that a career in engineering has the potential to both change the world, and is within their grasp, these young women are preparing to use their talents, determination and intelligence to positively impact the way we live – now and in the years ahead.

Sound like something you want to check out? Find out more here

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Posted in San Francisco | No Comments »

New IBM Academic Initiative Ensures No Recent Grad Gets Left Behind

February 13th, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

I am sure many of you recent-college grads can relate to my short anecdote: I graduated in 2009 with a degree in journalism and began applying to numerous jobs right away. Every e-mail sent felt like throwing another dull dart at a dartboard. To make me feel even worse, the jobs I thought I qualified for – the ones for writers and reporters – required that I know Ruby, Java, C++, and write HTML. Frustrated I considered my options: go back to school and learn computer science? Teach myself with “For Dummies” books? Fortunately, future students won’t have to experience my frustrations thanks to IBM’s new Academic Initiative.IBM_Intelligent_Planet_Icon_v2_01262009

On February 9, in order to make sure no college kid gets left behind when entering the job market, IBM announced the launch of what it calls a free “academic cloud,” basically a bundle of web-based IBM software to help professors teach technology skills to students. The IBM software will allow professors to teach students in many specific and current skills in technology including: software development, information management, web 2.0, and cloud computing.

Not only has IBM realized the trend, but the Department of Labor has noticed as well and recently stated that the majority of jobs in the near future will have a heavy focus on technology and having technical skills, including technical consulting and computer systems design.

So, that begs the question, why the sudden increase in tech? True, we aren’t experiencing the dotcom days of the 90s anymore, but we are witnessing the birth and evolution of web 2.0—social networking and applications. Love them or hate them, Facebook and Twitter have made the masses more comfortable with technology. Pre-social networking, the older generation had no incentive to get online and explore the web. Now, generations old and young, parents and grandparents, are flocking to the sites to find long lost first loves, keep up with buddies from school, and share pictures of their kids.

With more people becoming comfortable with technology and thus tech-savvy, the consumer profile is changing. People Small businesses everywhere are changing the way they market to appeal to the new techie and creating new job descriptions to fill these new voids in the companies—hopefully, with the help of IBM, recent grads will now be prepared.

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Posted in San Francisco | 1 Comment »

Do You Know What Your’re Doing for Vday?

February 7th, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

valentines-day-gifts

Forgive me if I am wrong, but I believe Valentine’s Day is one of the least romantic days of the year. The majority of men become robots for a day; purchasing flowers, chocolates, and jewelry for their sweethearts because that is what everyone else is doing. This year, bypass the glittery red confetti, cheesy “I Love You” bears, generic red roses, and genetically engineered gigantic chocolate dipped strawberries to try something personal for a change. Below are eight tips written by New York-based psychologist and author Marty Babits. Read on for creative, thoughtful, and fun ways to show your partner you love them—minus all the cheesy Valentine’s Day swag.

8 Tips for Renewing Your Relationship This Valentine’s Day
By Marty Babits, LCSW, BCD,

Author of “The Power of Middle Ground: A Couple’s Guide to Renewing Your Relationship”

1. How many ways do I love thee? Let me count the ways. Pick at least three qualities about your partner that you love. Gift each one of these with something special. For example, give him a CD by her favorite recording artist in celebration of whatever you consider to be his most appealing facial feature. Choose a clothing accessory that includes the color that you think best flatters your partner and celebrate the way they look in that color. Come up with a quality that you have always valued, from the start of your relationship onward and feature that in a message written in a blank card by you with a tender sign-off. De-emphasize the gifts and emphasize the qualities that you want to call attention to and celebrate.

2. Surprise! Believe it or not some psychoanalysts evaluate the psychic well-being of their clients by determining the degree to which they are capable of surprise! A person who is not responsive to surprise elements in their life is unable to respond spontaneously. Their capacity for joy — and feeling in general — is impaired. Give your partner a reason to light up the surprise center in their mid-brain! Think of something that they would like but will not suspect. Have you written them a poem lately? Have you recorded the opening strains of “You are the Sunshine of My Life” on a hand-held tape recorder lately and handed it to them with a post-it instruction to hit the play button? When was the last time you brought your sweetheart a passion fruit chocolate truffle from one of the finest chocolatiers in your community? Whatever it is, make it pleasant and surprising. By the way, the residual benefit of surprising your partner is that you activate your own surprise center. No pun intended, it will be surprisingly beneficial for you.

3. Hand your partner a prerogative pass. (Print it out on an index card if you like.) With this pass he will be able to exercise their prerogative in a situation where there is usually a conflict over who gets their way. The one limit to the pass is that they are not allowed to exercise a prerogative if it forces you to do something that you feel uncomfortable doing. Next time you have a conflict over which restaurant to go to your partner can flash the prerogative pass and you’ll go Italian if that’s their choice rather than whatever else you might have felt in the mood for. Again, this presupposes that you like Italian — whether or not it would have been your pick that evening or not.

4. Look your partner in the eye and tell them three things that you love about them. They can be big ticket items, like the way you feel together when you are making love. They can be smaller fare, like the way you love it when they wrinkle their nose and close their eyes when they are hysterical with laughter. They can be somewhere in between like when they listen to you explain something in a way that you yourself realize is quite impossible to follow without complaining that they got lost four times in the telling. Write down what you are going to say before beginning this one. Then read it with feeling as if you were auditioning for a part in a movie starring opposite whoever your greatest heart-throb might be. By the way, you can fantasize about a star from any era in this exercise. Living or dead, domestic or foreign — anything goes. Only make sure you deliver your lines with feeling.

5.  Think about something that you and your partner have had trouble coming to terms with in the past year — like speaking civilly to each other when either of you is angry; or perhaps, discussing a conflict in your financial situation. Without referencing your partner, give a commitment to improve your own ability to speak about the topic without blaming. Tell your partner that you are going to accentuate understanding the issue from their point of view and that you are hoping to have fewer hurtful arguments this coming year. Tell them that you want to conduct your relationship in the middle ground as much as you possibly can; this means that you want to work together, acknowledge and appreciate each other’s hopes and dreams and make all plans with these understandings in mind.

6.  Is your partner an exercise enthusiast? If so, did you happen to catch Marisa Tomei doing hula hoop exercises on The Ellen DeGeneres Show? The exercise looks like fun — read about comments on this product on Amazon — and if you think your partner would enjoy a novel kind of exercise, purchase the item and attach a note pledging, “I hope you enjoy going through this hoop. I look forward to going through all sorts of hoops with you! And I’m lovin’ it.” Note: Only take this suggestion if you and your partner have a similar sense of humor and you think this would tickle them.

7. Do you prepare a food dish that your partner loves? If the answer is yes, put an announcement inside your Valentine’s Day card saying that on such-and-such a date you will be cooking a blankety-blank dinner for them to continue on with the celebration of the love you share. Ask them to contribute on that night by bringing along whatever will enhance the meal for you — a favorite beverage or dessert that they can purchase or make.

8.  Take a minute to think about a trait of yours that your partner has communicated having a problem with — for example, a hot temper or messiness. Think about any constructive suggestions that your partner has made that you think, when you are considering this calmly and not when you are in the heat of a disagreement, is reasonable and possibly something that you might be able to put into practice. This tip works best if you feel that the trait is something that you actually would like to change within yourself. Research self-help either on the internet or in the self-help section of your favorite book store and find out what authors suggest may be helpful in your particular situation. Jot down the best helpful tip you can find and write your partner a note stating that you have heard their complaint, take it seriously and are poised to work on it. Outline the plan that you have read about that makes sense and feel you can realistically implement. Describe it to your partner. Sit back and let the communication magic do its work. You will have just demonstrated acknowledgment of their feelings; appreciation of their communications on a difficult topic; acceptance of their concerns. You well may have instilled hope and mutuality into your dialogue.

So this Valentine’s Day be original and take things to a new level! Chocolate and flowers have their appeal, but they lack emotional value. Think you have a more creative idea than the ones above? Comment below and share with us!
Remember: timing is everything! So hurry—it’s almost Valentine’s Day!

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Posted in San Francisco | No Comments »

Women 2.0 Presents “Will it Launch” Feb 6-7

February 2nd, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

 

Want to know if that business idea you wrote down on a crumpled napkin can actually lead to crisp dollar bills? Have too many crumpled idea napkins and don’t know where to start? Join Women 2.0 for a two-day workshop February 6-7 in Microsoft’s San Francisco office. The “Will it Launch” workshop will be lead by David Weekly (Founder and CEO of PBWorks) and Poornima Vijayshankar (Founding Engineer, Mint). The two of them will quickly assess startup ideas and then teach you how to perfect that startup pitch so you leave the workshop ready to find co-founders, customers, investors, volunteers, the like-minded — anyone who will help you launch and or buy your product.

The two-day schedule is as follows:

Saturday, February 6th, 2010
9:00am — Breakfast
9:30am — Welcome & Introductions
10:00am — Introductory Improv Session
1:00pm — Lunch
2:00pm — “Will It Launch?” Workshop (with David Weekly and Poornima Vijayashanker)
5:00pm — Social drinks
Sunday, February 7th, 2010
10:00am — “Will It Launch” Co-Working
12:00pm — Snacks & Drinks
1:00pm — Open Office Hours (with Betty Kayton, Jorge Calderon, Poornima Vijayashanker, and Saad Khan)
2:00pm — Improv Session
3:00pm — Elevator Pitches (with judging and advice from Betty Kayton, Dave Mcclure, David Ulevitch, Poornima Vijayshanker, and Rashmi Sinha)
5:00pm — Closing Remarks

 
Interested? Click here to register.

 
Want to go, but not in San Francisco? Tune in here for a live stream.

 

For more information visit www.women2.org/willitlaunch/

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Posted in San Francisco | No Comments »

“She’s Geeky” unConference Jan 29-31

January 28th, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

Girls–grab your glasses, smashes-geeky-20091214-161741rtphone, and laptop! She’s Geeky-the two year old concept founded in Silicon Valley by Kayliya Hamlin (www.identitywoman.net), is returning to the Bay Area for a third time on January 29,30,31 at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View for its 5th unConference. Tickets range from $210 for three days, $140 for two days, and $75 for one day. Discounted rates are also available. Doors open at 8:15 am with activities ending at 5:30 pm each day.

UnConference? Like “Alice in Wonderland’s” “Happy Unbirthday”? Close–let me explain. She’s Geeky is an unConference because all of the events on the agenda are created by the participants in real time on the day the event happens. This format is beneficial because it encourages peer-to-peer learning, dialogue about issues that are top of mind and networking. She’s Geeky aims to inspire women working it the STEM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) and the conference is a chance for women to see their contribution to their field in a new light.

You can find She’s Geeky on Facebook, Twitter, and at www.shesgeeky.org.

To register for the unConference click here: http://shesgeekybayarea3.eventbrite.com/?ref=ecount

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Posted in San Francisco | No Comments »

Girls in Tech Catalyst Conference – A Huge Success!!!

January 27th, 2010
San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

Women of all ages and aspirations crowded the second floor of the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on Tuesday January 26 at the inaugural “Girls in Tech Catalyst Conference.” Some drove in the pouring rain while others had flown in from across the nation as evidenced by their small carry ons dragging behind them. The sold-out conference started promptly at 8:45  with founder and CEO Adriana Gascoigne’s opening remarks, here is a small clip from her speech:

“ THIS CONFERENCE IS ABOUT INFLUENCING AND MOTIVATING, AND I AM TRULY INSPIRED BY EACH ONE OF YOU – WOMEN WHO HAVE SUCH VARIED ROLES IN THE INDUSTRY BUT ARE ALL PASSIONATE ABOUT TECHNOLOGY, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, AND BRINGING THE ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF WOMEN IN THE FIELD TO THE FOREFRONT.”

The conference truly brought together a diverse group of very influential and inspiring women like keynote speaker, Heather Harde, CEO of Tech Crunch. Harde shared what she had learned during her years in the industry and working for startups. She made the audience laugh and think with unique questions like, “is the juice worth the squeeze?” Referring to weighing the rewards when taking risks. Some other advice she shared: always have options and authenticity matters.

Attendees had the chance to participate in a total of eight panels and one workshop with topics such as: “Branding and Marketing”, “VC Deals”, “The Art of Negotiation”, “Social and New Media”, “Coding and Developing”, “Social Gaming” and “Innovation in Business.” This being a tech conference, the room was equipped in style with free Girls in Tech wifi giving those who attended the conference to tweet live, spread the word, and join in on the live conversation going on in the twittersphere with the tag #gitcc.

After a lot of tweeting, blogging, talking, and sharing, each girl made their way down the street to the official Girls in Tech after party at Roe Lounge where they had the chance to catch up and network some more.

Overall the conference exceeded our expectations. A big thank you to everyone who helped put it together! To all the attendees-thanks for making it a SOLD-OUT event! We look forward to next year’s conference and continuing to inspire, motivate, and bring a voice to all girls in the tech industry around the world!

Want to know more about the conference? Want to know how you can get involved with Girls in Tech and our conference next year? Email us at info@girlsintech.net for more information!

girls in tech 1

girls in tech 2

girls in tech 3

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Posted in San Francisco | 5 Comments »

Tech Trends in 2010

January 25th, 2010
Orange County, San Francisco
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Natasha Thakkar

logo_mofo

Apple’s iPhone, Motorola’s Droiusers_in_the_cloudd, Google’s Nexus One, the much anticipated Apple iSlate, and of course, the one that started the smart phone craze—the Blackberry. These are just some of the many tech devices that suddenly a majority of us can’t live without. In a country where the concept of fast food was born, and later spread throughout the world, it is no surprise that America loves the speed and immediacy of smart phones. Nowadays, even a laptop seems slow (seriously, who wants to wait for it to load the home screen?) when you can browse the net with the swipe of a finger and receive your news as it happens through Twitter. With the smart phone becoming an essential rather than a luxury and social gaming and social media permeating all businesses, 2010 promises to be a great year for the tech industry.

Every year, San Francisco-based law firm Morrison Foerster surveys its lawyers from the US, Europe, and Asia regarding the current state of the world’s outsourcing markets and emerging trends that will most probably shape the market over the next year. This year, the spotlight was on the tech industry, as lawyers made predictions about cloud computing. This of course is no surplogo_moforise, because of social networking. It has become a major trend in the tech industry, is in all aspects including marketing and gaming, and it’s all cloud based. In social media everything is in a shared network and because of its commonalities with cloud computing, the two are slowly but surely intersecting . Together social media and cloud computing are slated to be the big movements in the web 2.0 space.

The firm expects cloud computing-the return to centralized processing-to become even more important this year, especially with major providers like IBM, Google, and Microsoft offering attractive desktop deals. The internet will be used to distribute services to multiple customers and 2010 will be the first year in which cloud computing will have a real role in procurement decisions. They mark cloud computing as a “global trend” and predict that the Cloud will become more important as companies realize they can achieve significant cost savings by exploring this option. But the key question hindering this prediction is: can anyone really define what “the cloud” means?

In an attempt to answer it, I am posing my own questions: what does “cloud computing” mean to you? What role do you think it has in 2010 and how big of a role is the social media trend playing in this return to cloud-computing?

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Posted in Orange County, San Francisco | 1 Comment »

Social Media: A Haute Trend?

January 10th, 2010
Girls In Tech
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Natasha Thakkar

Twitter Nails

“Twit-tahh?” the manicurist gave me a puzzled expression, “What’s that?” she turned her attention back to my nails, carefully cutting away at the dead skin near the base of my nail and listening as I explained the viral phenomenon that is Twitter. I asked her if she had heard about the “Twitter manicure” I read about in a PopSugar article recently, negative. None of the manicurists in the Palo Alto-based salon had ever used Twitter or Facebook, let alone heard of either of them.

As shocking as the image of hot blue nails with miniature light blue birds and bright orange “fail whales” painted on them is, it’s only the newest concept in the evolving relationship between social media and fashion. Social networks such as Twitter and Facebook have been featured on t-shirts for a long time now. Popular shirt sites like cafepress.com and threadless.com sell shirts that feature slogans such as “140 is the new 420,” “Don’t Make Me Unfriend You” and “I’m Not A Blogger, I just Tweet A Lot.”

So, does this mean that social media not only a hot trend, but a haute trend as well? Last year, I wrote briefly about Shopflick —a place where online shopping meets YouTube. The website doesn’t feature mass-market retailers, major fashion brands, or look to advertise through mass-media. Instead, it calls itself a “video-powered marketplace for indie-inspired goods.” And features designers like Amy Hall, for Amy Kathryn Handbags. By viewing the two minute video (each item has their own), we meet Amy and listen to her describe her product, her inspirations, and her reason as to why her product is better than the rest. At the end of those two minutes we have all the information we need to make a purchase. Another site similar to Shopflick is StyleHop. This one brings social gaming and fashion together through fun style-rating games and links to post directly to Myspace and Facebook. It uses a Yelp-like system and provides viewers with advice on the most popular fashion for that city.

Is video shopping better than window shopping? That is up for debate. Personally, I prefer strolling through the mall and trying things on over sitting at home in my pajamas clicking on images and videos.

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Posted in Girls In Tech | 3 Comments »

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