Tagged
Facebook


11:15 am, tgoss
picture

05:19 pm, tgoss
reblogged
5 notes
quote
Facebook easily has the brand equity to launch their own phone (most likely with a partner at first) and marry it to your address book, photos, videos and events in ways that Google can never match because they are more social. Facebook gets connections and how to use the data to make your life better.

The Steve Rubel Lifestream - Insights on emerging technologies and trends. (via hiten)

Interesting possibilities with something like this…


09:29 pm, tgoss
quote
Facebook wins the best startup at the Crunchies again… geez, 3 years in a row!

12:57 pm, tgoss
4 notes
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The new Facebook App for iPhone (v 3.1) lets you download your friends photos and store them as the profile images for your Phone’s address book.  This is definitely pretty cool.
It also now has push notifications, also cool.

The new Facebook App for iPhone (v 3.1) lets you download your friends photos and store them as the profile images for your Phone’s address book.  This is definitely pretty cool.

It also now has push notifications, also cool.


09:04 am, tgoss
Link
Location! Location! Location Based Services!

MG Siegler of TechCrunch posted a good article on the power of location based services (“LBS”) and how we will derive increasing value from them as they become more mainstream.

I’ll simply add that the most important feature in LBS ability to go mainstream and prove useful will be the handling of the signal to noise ratio: the amount of useful information coming that you care about as compared to the amount of information that your really don’t care about.

Currently, this is a widely discussed topic because for all the utility of the real-time stream, there is an inherent difficulty in separating the information you want from the total amount of information you’re digesting. As you begin following/friending more people the problem gets increasingly more severe. Some people handle this by having few friends and therefore digesting less information. That’s a workable strategy but also self limiting (exactly who’s good enough to make your friends list?)

The real winner here will be the first company that masters how to provide contextually relevant LBS. Google’s pagerank approach to everything may serve as an example to Facebook, Twitter, FourSquare and others aiming to provide LBS.

Ultimately, the situation is similar to the earliest days of email, when it was a pretty big deal if you received an email. It was unique and had a cool factor that went with it. Of course now we all bitch about just how many emails we get and just how many of those are useless crap.

In time, LBS may will develop an identical problem unless some company comes up with a formula for ranking and assigning relevancy to LBS data. As they say at most conferences where real-time is discussed: you may be thirsty, but it’s still tough to drink from the firehose!


08:20 pm, tgoss
reblogged
1 note
picture HD
taitran:


xoai:

Facebook has grown into one of the largest sites on the Internet today serving over 200 billion pages per month, handling 30.000 servers, 300 million active users, 20 billion photos, and 25TB per day of logging data.
Source: High Scalability

taitran:

xoai:

Facebook has grown into one of the largest sites on the Internet today serving over 200 billion pages per month, handling 30.000 servers, 300 million active users, 20 billion photos, and 25TB per day of logging data.

Source: High Scalability


11:20 am, tgoss
picture
Awesome design aesthetic for Facebook’s new offices in Palo Alto

Awesome design aesthetic for Facebook’s new offices in Palo Alto