SlashGear 101: this week’s Facebook News Feed redesign

The changes that are coming to your Facebook News Feed are numerous – but they’re not going to interrupt the way you do business on a daily basis. Instead you’re going to find the features added this week by the Facebook crew to be just that – Features: helpful and (hopefully) rather intuitive to use. For those of you working with the mobile app version of Facebook on either iOS or Android, this change-over will be extra simple: it is, at its core, a bridge between the mobile and desktop experience.

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Facebook speaks up on the changes

What you’ll want to see first is Facebook’s designers speaking up about the changes they’ve made themselves. They’re always good at making the case for a positive forward movement, and today’s video is no exception. They’ll speak up here about each of the three main points this change is pushing before we go through them one by one.

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Design choices throughout this new iteration of the News Feed on Facebook show the company to be coming to terms with the idea that images are king. If you post a photo, you’ll find that you’ve got the largest preview showing in your News Feed that Facebook has ever shown before – along with Like, Comment, and Share buttons right below in newly smoothed-out sections. If two people become friends, you’ll see one of them in a tiny icon and the other represented by not just their icon, but their header image as well.

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When you see a link being shared, you’ll also see a short list of icons associated with the people who have shared it on Facebook as well. Hovering over one of these icons expands the rest – this element is in place to have people finding new friends with similar interest, of course. Along those same lines you’ll find Upcoming Events appearing next to single dates – Fridays, for example, will be of particular interest.

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Finally you’ll see newly revamped posts from pages – this will be great for pages such as SlashGear (http://www.facebook.com/SlashGear) for appearing in your News Feed in a newly sleek setup. As with the rest of the feature updates, this redesign is much more simplistic than it’s been in the past.

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Choice of Feeds

With a new pull-down menu that reads “News Feed” until you switch it, you’ll be able to select from any of the following to syphon your feed down to just the items you want: Most Recent, All Friends, Photos, Music, Following, Games, or Groups. This filter will be working in both the desktop (web browser) and mobile user interfaces soon – simple and smooth.

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This filter will not be the first time you’ll be seeing a page that only shows photos and videos, but it is the first time we’re seeing Facebook push the “Following” aspect in a completely separate way. You can follow people on Facebook without friending them – this is good for “famous” users and the like – with this filter you’ll be able to see things that they share with the public and nothing else. This is much closer to what we see on Twitter on the daily – not so much the personal friendliness of Facebook.

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Mobile Consistency

Both the desktop and the mobile editions of this change-over are going to be pushed almost at the same time. The desktop version will be coming first – with a limited roll-out starting today, the day of the update’s announcement. The mobile version – for iOS and Android at once, mind you – will be out in coming weeks.

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The “Mobile Consistency” title refers also to the idea that the design for both user interfaces are now much more close to one another than they’ve ever been before. The biggest addition to the desktop end of things is the left-hand sidebar – get anywhere you need to from any Facebook nook or cranny, no more need to go all the way back to the News Feed every time!

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SlashGear 101: this week’s Facebook News Feed redesign is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook Choice of Feeds, Mobile UI detailed: rollout begins today

This week the folks at Facebook are updating the way that your News Feed works. One of the several features revealed this week was “Choice of Feeds” – this feature allowing you to control what you see to a whole new degree. There’s an “All Friends” option, there’s one for Music, and there’s a feed for just Photos, too. You’ll also find a “following” feed that only shows Facebook friends, brands, and etc that you follow specifically.

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There’s also a Games feed, Interest feeds that you create, and more. You’ll also quite simply be able to browse your News Feed exactly the same as you’ve been able before today -one of the most interesting changes here is in the small amount of change Facebook is implementing. Functionality is expanding, but the already-working model the social network has been kept, for the most part.

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All Friends News Feed

For those of you that’ve been using Facebook on a tablet or smartphone for the past few months, you’ll notice that this new version of Facebook is extremely similar to that interface – here on desktop. A left-side tray exists now on the desktop web browser that’s been existing on tablets and smartphones for quite a while, this tray allowing users to move from any page inside Facebook to any other page without needing to go back to the News Feed.

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Just Photos News Feed

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All Following News Feed

Small items like the “# New Stories” bubble have been ported over from the mobile user interface as well, and the whole look of the design – essentially consistent across all devices – is ever-so-slightly more modern looking (and feeling). You’ll find these features at facebook.com/newsfeed today (in a Limited Rollout edition) with updates to both the tablet and smartphone – for both iOS and Android – coming in the weeks ahead.

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Facebook Choice of Feeds, Mobile UI detailed: rollout begins today is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

How to Get the Glorious New Facebook News Feed Early

Facebook just showed of its vision for the future of your news feed, and we have to say it’s beautiful. Facebook will start rolling it out to users today; if you want to get on the waiting list for an early look, the sign-up page is here. More »

Facebook News Feed Update: it’s all changing – again

If you’ve heard about the Facebook event this week surrounding changes to the social network’s main feed, you’ve likely felt a little tinge of annoyance. It’s not as if we’ve not seen drastic changes to one of the most visited websites in the history of the world before, but as it’s been made clear several times before: people don’t like change in the tools they use every single day. So what can we expect over the next few months now that the Facebook crew is letting loose a brand new collection of features?

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Down at Facebook central Mark Zuckerberg himself stood in front of a live audience to speak on what’s worked for the massively popular social environment in the past and what would be coming up in the near future for you, I, and everyone around us – Facebook users all. With a commanding lead in the social networking universe – and such an honor on the head of Facebook for several years running – Zuckerberg is no stranger to speaking as a leader in the industry: that much was clear at this week’s event.

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According to Zuckerberg, Facebook stands alone: “There’s no other social service like this at scale.” With Facebook’s News Feed, Zuckerberg made it clear that the company’s aim is “to give everyone in the world the best personalized newspaper available.”

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The redesign for News Feed is simple – it doesn’t change an extreme amount, instead opting to bridge the gap between mobile and desktop web browser editions. Zuckerberg noted that “this design reflects the evolving face of your News Feed.” The three things that are coming to the newest version of Facebook as focuses are:

• Rich Stories
• Choice of Feeds
• Mobile Consistency

You’ll find these changes detailed further here on SlashGear throughout the day – stay tuned for features on each! Meanwhile the short story is this: it’s the same Facebook you’re dealing with here: this change is, basically, just a series of tweaks.

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Below you’ll find a timeline of Facebook announcements that’ve gone live this week – have a peek at know the full truth! Be sure to let us know what you think of the changes that are coming down with Facebook in the near future too – are you all about change, or would you rather stick with what works? Or is that all too simple?


Facebook News Feed Update: it’s all changing – again is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook freshens up News Feed, brings bigger images, feed filtering and a uniform cross-platform UX

We knew Facebook had something new planned for its News Feed, and today at an event at Facebook HQ in Menlo Park, the company confirmed those rumors. As suspected, the new feed filters content by type to display whatever specific feed you choose (be it photos, music, games, etc.), plus it presents even larger images and bigger advertisements. The new layout also serves to better highlight Pages users have liked in a more central and easier to access area, and provides info pulled in by services linked to folks’ Facebook IDs.The desktop FB site’s not the only beneficiary of the new layout, as the Social Network is also bringing these features to its mobile apps as well to provide a consistent experience across platforms. And, the best part is it starts rolling out today to a select few, with a wider rollout to follow once all the kinks have been worked out.

Why the change? Well, Mark Zuckerberg said that the goal for News Feed is to “give everyone in the world the best personalized newspaper we can,” and making it more visually engaging will help Facebook reach that goal. You see, almost 50 percent of the content in News Feed is now photos, and almost 30 percent of content comes from Pages. Want to know more? There’s more info about the changes after the break.

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Source: Facebook

Facebook’s New News Feed: The Biggest Change In Years

The last time Zuck overhauled the website you check all day every day was two years ago. Two! You’ve probably changed a decent amount since then, but Facebook hasn’t in a way that’s done anything but make us cringe—until today. Enter the clutter killer. Here’s how you’ll be stalking the universe now. More »

Facebook event at 1pm ET: changes you can expect

In just a little over an hour, Facebook will be showing off what we think is a redesign to the frontpage News Feed on the social network. We received an invitation to the event last week, and it mentioned to “come see a new look for News Feed,” so that really can only mean one thing. However, what new features will they introduce, and how drastic will the redesign be?

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Facebook has been focusing a lot on its Timeline profile pages and it’s new Graph Search feature, so today’s News Feed update will be one of the first focused redesigns of the News Feed in a long time. According to TechCrunch, Facebook is said to be launching content-specific news feeds that will consist of multiple categories like Instagram photos and Music feed that will show what friends are listening to, as well as recommend new albums to listen to.

It’s also said that larger images and image-based ads in both the web and mobile version of the news feeds will be introduced. Facebook has certainly been focusing its efforts in photo sharing, so more emphasis on photos could definitely be a main part of the News Feed update, and more-prominent photos on the frontpage could very well be in the cards for the social network.

All-in-all, we could see a complete revamp of the frontpage News Feed. Since Facebook has been mostly ignoring it for a few years now, the layout has become somewhat dated, and the company maybe looking at shaking things up. Of course, what we’re mostly yearning for is faster loading speeds, which we’re sure that Facebook will also introduce with the redesign. Stay tuned later today to see what Facebook has been cooking up.


Facebook event at 1pm ET: changes you can expect is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Liveblog: Facebook Reveals a ‘New Look for News Feed’

Liveblog: Facebook Reveals a ‘New Look for News Feed’

Live updates from Facebook’s News Feed event, where the company is expected to reveal a revamped design for the feature.

New York’s Reinvent Payphones project top six finalists announced

Payphones are a relic of the past, something the latest generation has likely never used. In an effort to revamp them for a world full of smartphones and instant connectivity, New York City’s Mayor Bloomberg announced the Reinvent Payphones project, calling for the hivemind to submit ideas on how to give the city’s thousands of payphones a modern makeover.

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New York City is home to about 11,000 payphones whose purpose has diminished over the years. Instead of rooting them from the ground, however, individuals came together to think of new ways to use them, submitting entries throughout last month. Those entries were judged on a variety of factors, and among them six were chosen as finalists.

Judging criteria was based on the entries’ ability to enable communication, the originality and innovation of the design, as well as its visual appeal and how well it works for the user, its functionality (including its sustainability), and its impact on the community, such as how it supports businesses, residents, and cultural hubs.

Now the project is calling for the public to cast their vote on their favorite design, with the winning entry being awarded the Popular Choice Award. Before casting a vote, you’ll need to like the project’s Facebook page, after which point you’ll get a glimpse of each design and a paragraph of info on it. Voting ends on March 15.

[via Venture Beat]


New York’s Reinvent Payphones project top six finalists announced is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook study shows users are engaging more with friends

Carnegie Mellon University performed a seven-year study on Facebook and its users. Researchers from Carnegie Mellon studied data from 5,076 Facebook users from 2005 to 2011 to analyze the correlation between changes in Facebook’s privacy features and user’s sharing their information. The study showed that every time Facebook improved its privacy features for users, users would actually share more information with their friends as well as 3rd party developers and advertisers.

Facebook users share more private information than they think

According to the study, from 2005-2009, Facebook users were very picky about the information they shared on their news feed. At the end of 2009, Facebook had changed its settings, and users, who the study say were presumably confused by the new settings, ending up sharing more information on their news feed and their profiles. When timeline was introduced in 2011, people started sharing even more data due to the number of added information fields available, like milestones and history.

Jules Polonetsky, director/co-chair of the Future of Privacy Forum, stated, “I think the study shows Facebook users have reached a reasonable equilibrium now that there is far less data being shared publicly and much more interactions with your friends, which is a good thing.” In a separate study, researchers found that 222,000 posts by Facebook users made over a course of a month were able to reach 61% of the people on their friend’s list.

It shouldn’t be surprising that when Facebook implements more privacy options, users feel more safe to share their personal information. The privacy features allow people to freely share their thoughts and photos without the fear of there being a maniac out there stalking them. With the news feed being redesigned frequently, it also entices users to test out the new features and see how they like it, even if they initially hate it.

[via ABC News]


Facebook study shows users are engaging more with friends is written by Brian Sin & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.