Tag Archives | social networking

The Facebook Phone is…Every Phone

Okay, it sounds like we can stop wondering if Facebook is about to launch a “Facebook Phone.” At this morning’s press event at Facebook headquarters, founder Mark Zuckerberg kicked things off by saying that the company has no interest in doing so. What it does want to do, he said, is to make everything more social–including all phones.

So all of today’s news involved stuff that applies to multiple existing phone platforms, and most of it was totally platform-agnostic. A quick recap after the jump.

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Tango, the Little Video Calling App That Could

Have you noticed?  Facebook, the world’s favorite social networking tool, has been jockeying for position lately. So have Skype and Twitter. These giants lost their lead after an unprecedented run-up from newcomer Tango, a new free mobile-to-mobile video calling service. Hours after launching on September 30, Tango became the #1 free social networking app—knocking off Twitter, Skype and Facebook in the App Store—in nine countries including the United States, Hong Kong, France, Taiwan, Spain and South Korea. And, just yesterday, Tango announced its 1 millionth download from the App Store and Android Marketplace. (At the moment, it’s slipped to the #2 spot, after Facebook.)

Without any cheerleading by Apple or any existing brand awareness or installed user base to speak of, Tango’s explosive rise is a feat of virality that every app developer dreams of. “It’s unheard of,” says Patrick Mork of GetJar, the world’s largest independent app store. Clearly, there is pent-up demand for free, two-way video calls that work reliably across platforms (Android and iOS) over 3G, 4G and Wi-Fi.  Yahoo is moving in fast, too, with its newest version of Yahoo Messenger, announced Monday, which does video chats on iOs devices over 3G and Wi-Fi and allows users to place video calls to and from desktops: it’s already #4 in the App Store’s “Top Free” social networking category, just behind Tango (#2) and Skype (#3).

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Bing Gets Facebook-ized

I’m at an event at Microsoft’s Silicon Valley campus, where a bunch of Microsoft and Facebook executives (including Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg) just finished showing some new Bing features that should start rolling out shortly. The two companies (which first established a partnership four years ago) are working together to integrate stuff Facebook knows about you and your friends into Bing search results, using Facebook’s Instant Personalization feature.

Mostly, what Bing is doing is looking at which Facebook Like buttons your buddies have clicked around the Web, then inserting a module into search results that spotlights pages they’ve given a thumbs-up. We saw examples involving searches relating to cars, San Francisco steakhouses, and the movie Waiting for Superman.

When you search for a person, Bing will also use your Facebook friendships to try and return relevant results–the example we saw involved a search for “Brian Lee” that returned a module with Brian Lees who were friends of the user’s friends.

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Facebook: How to Love It (or Leave It)

Hey, it’s Tuesday, the day that TIME.com publishes the original Technologizer column which I write for it each week. The new one is titled “A Five-Step Program for Facebook Happiness,” and  I was moved to write it after Facebook introduced a new Groups feature last week that managed to be simultaneously neat and annoying. It dawned on me that while I sometimes grouse about the site–especially its chaotic approach to introducing new features–I’m ultimately a fan, because I’ve figured out how to make it work for me. In this column, I share some tips for making it work for you. (Or acknowledging that it doesn’t work for you: Quitting Facebook is a perfectly defensible decision, although there seem to be a lot more people who say they will leave than actually pull the trigger…)

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Leave Facebook, Make Your Friends Miserable

I have no intention of quitting Facebook, but I just gave it a scare: As part of my research for an upcoming TIME.com column, I clicked on the service’s Deactivate Account link, just to see what would happen.

What happened included a last-ditch effort by Facebook to talk me out of saying goodbye even temporarily–by showing me photos of myself with four other Facebook members, saying they’d (sniff) miss me, and offering to help me send them messages (presumably to explain my irrational decision).

As it happens, I don’t think any of the four individuals Facebook picked would be hugely traumatized by me quitting. They’re all Bay Area locals, and they’re all folks I encounter quite often in person. (I’ve seen three out of five of them within the past five days, come to think of it.) It’s the people I don’t see face to face often–and whom I haven’t seen in decades in some cases–who Facebook is particularly good for keeping up with.

If you want to tug at my heartstrings, Facebook, tell me that my high-school classmates will mourn my departure–if I was flirting with abandoning you, that might make me come back to my senses…

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Facebook’s Promising, Infuriating New Groups Feature

Facebook rarely fails to be true to its company culture, which is…well, let’s see: Facebook is like a bull that’s constantly breaking things in its own china shop, then repairing the damage after customers complain.

That sure seems to be true with its all-new Groups feature, which is designed to let members create small clusters of friends who can share information and photos, and otherwise interact. Groups can be private or public, and kind of feel like they let you create a Facebook of your own within Facebook.

They’re a swell idea, except:

  • Anyone can add any friend to a Group without permission, and the fact that second person is a member of the Group is public if the Group is public;
  • By default, you’ll get e-mail notifications from the Group, even if it’s a Group you didn’t want to belong to in the first place.

End result: You can find yourself a member of a Group you have absolutely no interest in, or would actively prefer not to be part of. You may also find messages in your in-box from unwanted Groups, even if you’ve otherwise switched Facebook settings to minimize notifications. You can turn off Group notifications, but there’s no way to prevent yourself from being joined to Groups–the best you can do is to un-join yourself once you’ve discovered you’re an unwilling member.

The Business Insider’s Nic Saint has more on all this here. And Hillel Fuld rants about these and other Groups issues in this post.

Facebook could instantly solve Groups’ issues by allowing other people to invite you to a group but not add you to it. I assume it’ll make that switch soon. But I’d love to understand the thought processes that lead the company to so frequently launch worthwhile new features in a way that’s bound to annoy a meaningful number of folks. I can’t quite tell if it’s bad at judging this still, doesn’t care, or likes to turn the knob up to 11 and then ratchet it down based on response from the public.

Odd side note: Groups were announced in a blog post by Mark Zuckerberg titled “Giving You More Control,” but the problem with them is that they don’t give you enough control…

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Facebook: New Groups, Downloadable Data

I wasn’t at Facebook’s press event this morning, but the news announced there is significant: a new version of Groups aimed at helping people manage communications with small clusters of friends and family, a way to download everything you ever posted to Facebook as one humongous Zip file, and better tools for keeping tabs on what Facebook apps are doing with your data.

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