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Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

News Social Media Update : Facebook Tests Emoji Reactions To Fix Its “Dislike” Problem

Back in September, during a town hall Q&A at Facebook’s headquarters in Menlo Park, CEO Mark Zuckerberg made a declaration that could hugely change the way the social network’s nearly 1.5 billion users use the site: that Facebook is working on a type of “dislike” button. “People have asked about the dislike button for many years,” he said. “We’ve finally heard you and we’re working on this and we will deliver something that meets the needs of the larger community.”
After some initial fuss, it was clarified that this wouldn’t exactly be a dislike button per se, but a kind of empathy button, a way to acknowledge significant life events when you see bad news from a friend on your feed, like a breakup or a natural disaster, without appearing to endorse them. Now, it’s official: Facebook has confirmed to Techcrunch that it has begun testing “Reactions,” six emoji that express a range of emotions beyond what a simple thumb can.

“As you can see, it’s not a “dislike” button,” wrote Facebook’s chief product officer Chris Cox in a post on the social network today, “though we hope it addresses the spirit of this request more broadly. We studied which comments and reactions are most commonly and universally expressed across Facebook, then worked to design an experience around them that was elegant and fun.”

That experience currently include emoji for “like, love, haha, yay, wow, sad, and angry.” You can deploy them on updates from your friends, Pages you follow, and brands you like. Or you might be able to, if Facebook decides to take this beyond its initial trial. Adam Mosseri, Facebook’s director of product, tells TechCrunch that Reactions will be tested in only two markets for now, Spain and Ireland, countries whose friend networks tend not to extend beyond national borders, making them ideal “closed test groups.” The biggest caveat: Facebook says it still needs to figure out whether it wants to tweak these empathetic emoji. “We’ll use the feedback from this to improve the feature and hope to roll it out to everyone soon,” Cox continued.

Either way, empathetic emoji are coming, at least for the residents of two countries, and probably for everyone else before long. Sure, Facebook could have opted for a more innovative take. And they still ultimately may. Then again, there’s no more universal language than a yellow circle frowny face with a tear drop falling down.

News Update On AI Based Virtual Assistant : Facebook Launches Its New Virtual Assistant ‘Facebook M’

Facebook is now moving to new league of virtual technology using assistants. Recently Facebook has launched a new virtual assistant named as Facebook M. This virtual assistant will be a part of Facebook Messenger and work on the same platform.

Interesting part of this assistant is while using this M users can do shopping and purchase items, get gifts delivered to your friends and loved ones, can book restaurants, can make arrangements of traveling and many more things that you can do simultaneously while talking to someone.
 
Unlike other virtual assistants that are available in market M uses text input to help users with their queries. Users will have to enter their queries and will get an answer as a text.

David Marus, the vice president of messaging products, said that on his Facebook Page that 'M' is powered by AI i.e. Artificial Intelligence that is trained and supervised by Human operators.

With no official date of launch, M has been launched in the Bay area in California and will eventually be made available to users all over the world. Facebook will develop this application for Android and iOS both.

News Update On LOL & HAHA Factor : Haha Vs LOL - Facebook Finds Out Which 'E-Laugh' Rules

New Delhi: Which type of an e-laugh user are you? The frequent ‘LOL’ one or the ‘Haha’ one, or do you like to use ‘hehe’ or prefer sending emoji over text?

Social networking giant Facebook has published its data on the not-so-universal language of laughter which reveals that the written laughter varies by age and gender.
The study analysed de-identified posts and comments with at least one string of characters matching laughter. The regular expressions for laughter were automatically identified in texts, including variants such as haha, hehe, emoji, and lol.
 
It was found that the most common e-laugh was ‘haha’ followed by various emojis denoting laughter and ‘hehe’.

Young people and women prefer emoji while men prefer longer ‘hehes’. Across genders, both men and women used more of ‘haha’ and ‘emoji’, followed by ‘hehe’ and ‘lol’.

News Social Network Update : Facebook Messenger No Longer Requires Facebook Account In Select Countries

As part of its continued effort to take over all of your communication needs, Facebook today tweaked Messenger to allow you to sign up without a Facebook account.

Facebook announced today that in the US, Canada, Peru, and Venezuela, you no longer need a Facebook account to sign up for Facebook Messenger. Instead, you can start using Messenger with just your name, phone number, and a photo.
Of course, Facebook would prefer you to sign up for a Facebook account, and it says that doing so will give you Messenger features like sync your messages across phones, tablets, and the web. It’s smart for Facebook to allow folks to sign up for Messenger without a Facebook account, though, because some people simply don’t want a Facebook account. And while some people won’t want a Facebook Messenger account either, others may appreciate being able to keep up with their friends on Facebook Messenger without needing a full-on Facebook account.

Do you use Facebook Messenger?

News Facebook Messenger Update : Games May Be Next Ffor Facebook Messenger

Facebook is reportedly looking to add games to its Messenger app. The social networking giant is having talks with game developers to integrate their mobile games with Messenger, according to a report from online magazine The Information.

Facebook officially announced support for third-party app integration into Messenger at its F8 developer platform in March. Since then, the company has partnered with a small number of third-party app developers, allowing users to add photos, animations and short video clips made with these third-party apps directly to their conversations.
Recipients of these messages get a link to install the apps, or reply with an image or animation of their own if they already have the app installed. Some of Facebook’s launch partners included JibJab, Giphy, ESPN and the Weather Channel.

Facebook is now looking to add game developers to that list, according to the Information, which spoke to three people briefed on those plans. However, it’s still unclear whether games will run directly within Messenger, or whether users will merely send invitations to play in a third-party app.

Asked about these plans, a Facebook spokesperson replied that the company is currently focused on content creation apps, but that the company plans to explore other opportunities in response to developer interest. She added that apps like Talking Tom, Giphy, Sound Clips, and Bitmoji have seen more than one million installs since the launch of the Messenger platform.

Facebook’s Messenger app has over 600 million active users and is a key part of the company’s strategy to focus on dedicated apps for communication and personal media — a strategy that also drove the acquisition of Whatsapp and Instagram.

Adding third-party apps to Messenger could one day be a big money-maker for Facebook; developers regularly pay top dollar to get users to install their apps. But it’s also a way for Facebook to compete with Apple’s and Google’s app stores, which could become less relevant if consumers instead get their recommendations for new apps directly from their social networks.
 
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