Documenting United States History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

514 Chapter 22 | A ConservAtive tenor | Period nine 1980 to the Present topiC^ ii^ |^ An end to History’s end^515515


And then there’s the App Launcher, which contains all of the apps on your
phone—in the demo this pointedly included Google Maps, Tumblr, DropBox,
and other potential competitors. In a sense it’s a replacement for your home
screen, so you never leave Home.
The software will be available for download beginning April 12 on a variety of
Android phones. In a few months, you can get it for tablets as well.
Underscoring the company’s commitment to being mobile first, with Wall
Street investors anxiously looking on, Zuckerberg proclaimed, “We think this is
the best version of Facebook there is.”
He later added, “At one level, this is just the next mobile version of Facebook.
At a deeper level this will start to be a change to the relationship with how we use
these computing devices.”
In other words, Zuck wants to make his relationship with your phone “Face-
book official.” The question is, will you hit accept?

Sam Schlinkert, “Facebook Is Invading Your Phone,” The Daily Beast, April 4, 2013, www
.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/04/04/facebook-is-invading-your-phone.html. © 2013 The
Daily Beast Company LLC. All rights reserved. Used by permission and protected by the
Copyright Laws of the United States. The printing, coping, redistribution, or retransmission of
this Content without express written permission is prohibited.

praCtiCing historical thinking


Identify: According to Mark Zuckerberg, what are the attractive features of the
new application for Facebook on smartphones?
Analyze: How does this new application influence the social lives of Americans?
Evaluate: To what extent does the smartphone—as seen by Zuckerberg—present
the same democratizing value in America as it did in the Middle East—as seen by
Barack Obama (Doc. 22.17)?

Document 22.19 Jennifer Medina, “new Suburban dream
Born of asia and Southern California,”
New York Times
2013

The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 eliminated quotas favoring immigration
from northern Europe and transformed the populations of the southwest and western
United States. This April 28, 2013, article from the New York Times examines the chang-
ing demographics of one California city.

SAN MARINO, Calif.—Beneath the palm trees that line Huntington Drive,
named for the railroad magnate who founded this Southern California city, hang
signs to honor families who have helped sponsor the centennial celebration here

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