
According to GlobalWebIndex 42% of Indonesian online mobile consumers use Facebook Messenger in Q2 2014.

According to GlobalWebIndex 42% of Indonesian online mobile consumers use Facebook Messenger in Q2 2014.
WhatsApp Co-Founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton
Earlier today, Facebook announced its acquisition of WhatsApp for $16 billion. It’s a spectacular milestone for the company’s co-founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton, and their remarkable team.
From the moment they opened the doors of WhatsApp,…
Will Facebook jump in to the stickers business for its Messenger app? :))
— Aulia Masna (@amasna) March 7, 2013
//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
The Verge has a good run through of the new features in Facebook 6 for iOS which includes chat heads and stickers. Watch the video if you can’t be bothered to read the post.
Jenna Wortham for the New York Times:
Amid the jaw-dropping financial figures the company revealed last week when it filed for a public offering was an interesting admission. Although more than half of its 845 million members log into Facebook on a mobile device, the company has not yet found a way to make real money from that use.
“We do not currently directly generate any meaningful revenue from the use of Facebook mobile products, and our ability to do so successfully is unproven,” the company said in its review of the risks it faces.

How to use Facebook Timeline | The Verge
Everything you need to know about how to set it up, tweak your privacy settings, and more
Much had been said about how everyone on Facebook is now connected by less than five degrees. I think what Facebook does is not much more than show that fact, a reflection if you will, of the many personal and professional connections we’ve made outside of the online social network. A research from Sysomos published last year showed similar results for Twitter.
Perhaps my use of Twitter and Facebook clouds my judgement somewhat but I find that Twitter allows me to connect with more people than Facebook does and those connections are much more meaningful and more valuable. As the saying goes, Facebook is for people you went to school with, Twitter is for people you wish you went to school with.
Honestly, I care little of the connections reflected on Facebook, I have little to no interest in the updates from people that Facebook shows me on its news feed. It’s not necessarily Facebook’s fault though that people I’m friends with on Facebook don’t post content that interest me, and I blame those who litter my news feed with stupid updates such as game requests.
Updates on Twitter on the other hand, are much more interesting to me because they bring new information, amusing stories, facts and discoveries and they made me appreciate the people who deliver those tweets more than those who post updates on Facebook.
Getting back to the research, if we go back a few more years, I bet we would see similar results for Friendster if such a research was done around that time. It’s not Facebook that brought connections closer, it’s the Internet. Facebook only shows it.
TechCrunch reported that Facebook actually already has an iPad app hidden within its iPhone app, presumably waiting for a roll out in the near future but an enterprising hacker figured out a way to activate the app and posted a couple of pictures and where to find the app. Shortly after TechCrunch posted more photos of the app which looks quite polished and ready to go.
Facebook previously had downplayed the importance of the iPad with Mark Zuckerberg himself saying that the iPad is not mobile, possibly implying that the company may not be considering writing an app specifically for the Apple tablet.
With this revelation, Facebook obviously had written an app for the iPad, it’s just a matter of time before it is made available publicly, instead of through a hack.

badass.
Reshared this from G+, anyone know where it came from originally? I found this but he got it from Skype
The iPad’s not mobile. It’s a computer.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
We need to make a tablet version of Facebook.
Facebook CTO Bret Taylor
Clearly the two are in agreement about customizing Facebook for different platforms.

World Map of the Day: Facebook data infrastructure engineering team intern Paul was “interested in seeing how geography and political borders affected where people lived relative to their friends,” so he plugged a sample of approx. ten million pairs of friends into the open-source statistics environment R. He played around with the data until he managed to get the effect he wanted.
After a few minutes of rendering, the new plot appeared, and I was a bit taken aback by what I saw. The blob had turned into a surprisingly detailed map of the world. Not only were continents visible, certain international borders were apparent as well. What really struck me, though, was knowing that the lines didn’t represent coasts or rivers or political borders, but real human relationships. Each line might represent a friendship made while travelling, a family member abroad, or an old college friend pulled away by the various forces of life.
Click here for hi-res.
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