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Facebook on Tuesday began rolling out the latest in a
rapid-fire series of enhancements to the leading social network as nascent rival
Google+ opened its membership to the world.
Facebook's "News Feed" that streams updates from friends will give priority to
important posts, images shared at the website will be displayed larger, and a
"Ticker" chat column is being added for real-time conversations.
"As Mark (Zuckerberg) put it, this is launching season," Facebook product
manager Keith Schacht told AFP while discussing the new features.
"This is an update we have been working on a long time, unrelated to anything
else," Schacht responded when asked whether the launch of rival Google+ in June
was a factor behind the recent barrage of Facebook features.
In recent weeks, Facebook has focused on ways for members to better control what
information gets shared with whom.
Facebook last week began letting members follow strangers Twitter-style with the
addition of "Subscribe" buttons that let people hear from people who aren't
friends at the network, and share insights with strangers.
Facebook also began letting members be more selective about what kinds of
updates from friends make it into their personal news feeds.
"Last week we announced (Smart) List and Subscribe, which were about more
control of what members see in the News Feed," Schacht said. "Today, these
changes are about letting people see the most important news."
If a Facebook user hasn't visited the social network for a few days, the news
feed will prominently display significant posts from friends that may have been
missed during that time away.
Someone who frequently checks their Facebook account will have recent happenings
at the top of his or her news feed.
"If you didn't read the newspaper for three days, then on Day Four you pick up a
newspaper how awesome would it be if the front page summarized the news from the
past three days?" Schacht asked.
"Facebook will get better over time at understanding what is important to each
person," he said. "If we are wrong, you can tell us."
The latest enhancement to photo viewing at Facebook increases the size of
uploaded images. About 250 million photos are uploaded daily to the social
network.
The new "Ticker" chat panel in a right-hand column on the screen allows people
to engage in text chats focused on freshly uploaded images or other posts.
"News Feed is an historical view of what your friends have shared," Schacht
said. "Ticker is about real-time exchanges with friends."
Facebook planned to begin rolling out the new features globally Tuesday and
expected them to reach all of its more than 750 million users within a week.
More Facebook announcements are expected at the social network's annual
developers conference taking place in San Francisco on Thursday.
The gathering will come just days after Google dropped the need for an
invitation to join the Internet giant's challenge to Facebook, Google+.
"For the past 12 weeks we've been in field trial, and during that time we've
listened and learned a great deal," Google senior vice president of engineering
Vic Gundotra said Tuesday.
"We're nowhere near done, but with the improvements we've made so far we're
ready to move from field trial to beta... Anyone can visit google.com/+, join
the project and connect with the people they care about."
Fresh enhancements to Google+ included letting members take part in video-chat
"Hangouts" using camera-enabled smartphones or tablet computers, or broadcast
video presentations to groups of watchers using "Hangouts On Air."
Google said it has also woven its Internet search expertise into the social
network by adding a query box.
Google+ combined aspects of Facebook and microblogging sensation Twitter, and
promised users that sharing aspects of their lives at the social network would
reflect levels of confidentiality granted in real life.
Google+ stresses the ability it gives users to separate online friends and
family into different "Circles," or networks, and to share information only with
members of a particular circle.
Google is hoping its billion users worldwide are drawn into the California-based
Internet giant's social network.
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