Facebook Debuts ‘Home’ For Android Phones
04 Apr, 2013
With its new “Home” on Android gadgets, Facebook aims to put its social network at the center of people’s mobile experiences.
If users choose to download Facebook’s Home software starting on April 12, the social network will become the hub of their Android smartphones. A phone from HTC that comes pre-loaded with Home will also be available starting that day, with AT&T Inc. as the carrier.
The idea behind the software is to bring Facebook content right to the home screen, rather than requiring users to check apps. “Home” comes amid rapid growth in the number of people who access Facebook from phones and tablet computers. Of its 1.06 billion monthly users, 680 million log in to Facebook using a mobile gadget.
The service is part of Facebook’s move to shift its users’ focus from “apps and tasks” to people, said CEO Mark Zuckerberg during Home’s unveiling at the company’s Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters on Thursday.
The new product, which resides on the home screen of Android phones, is a family of apps designed to help people share things with their Facebook friends. Rather than seeing a set of apps for email, maps and other services when they first turn on their phones, users will be greeted with photos and updates from their Facebook feeds. There will be ads too, eventually.
“We think this is the best version of Facebook there is,” Zuckerberg said.
Zuckerberg says users can have an experience on Android phones that they can’t have on other platforms. That’s because Google makes the software available on an open-source basis, allowing others to adapt it to their needs.
Recognizing that text messaging is one of the most important tasks on a mobile phone, Facebook also showed off a feature called “chat heads.” This lets users communicate with their friends directly from their phone’s home screen – without opening a separate app.
The move that coincides with rapid growth among the number of users who access the social network from smartphones and tablet computers and Facebook’s aim to evolve from its Web-based roots into a “mobile-first” company.
The new Home service won’t be available on Apple’s iPhone and iPad devices. Apple’s iOS and Mac operating systems include features that integrate Facebook’s services, but Zuckerberg says doing something like Home would require a closer partnership.
Apple had no immediate comment
AP
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