SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: January 17, 2013

Welcome to Thursday evening folks. Today we heard that Samsung may use MWC 2013 to unveil a new Galaxy Note 8.0 tablet, which is certainly exciting to say the least. According to new rumors, Verizon may be shipping the Samsung ATIV Odyssey on January 24, while a new Apple job listing suggests some major Siri improvements coming in the future. Instagram said today that it has 90 million monthly active users who are uploading 40 million photos per day, and even though Intel’s earnings for Q4 2012 were down, the company still managed to pull in $13.3 billion in revenue.

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New photos from the incoming Steve Jobs biopic are showing us what John Gad looks like as Steve Wozniak, with Time Warner Cable accusing Netflix of discriminating against its customers today. Carrier-specific Galaxy Nexus phones are getting updates to Android 4.2.1 Jelly Bean save for Verizon’s version, while Sony showed off the construction of products that were new to CES in a five-minute video. King.com has unseated Zynga for the top spot on Facebook’s charts, and 13-inch Retina MacBooks are now available in Apple’s refurbished store.

Dish network is asking the FCC view SoftBank’s deal with Sprint as “unripe for consideration,” and Sony announced that Classic White PS3 bundles will be making their way to North America on January 27. Speaking of the PlayStation family, we learned today that the PS Vita can only hold 100 apps, even if there’s room on the memory card for more. Google CEO Larry Page talked about what kind of influence the company has over Motorola, while in the same interview talking about why Google may not exist if it weren’t for Nikola Tesla.

Skype said today that it isn’t helping Facebook with its new calling service, while a new patent suggests that Google Glass could be outfitted with laser-projected keyboards. American Airlines unveiled a new look today, and Temple Run 2 was busy burning up the iOS App Store’s free chart just hours after release. NASA says 2012 was the 9th-warmest year on record since the 1880s, and Valve has announced that it will be showing off a virtual reality port of Team Fortress 2 at GDC 2013. Finally tonight, Don Reisinger asks if Apple doubt is beginning to creep in. That does it for tonight’s Evening Wrap-Up, we hope you enjoy the rest of your night everyone!


SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: January 17, 2013 is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Stupid California Cost Itself $600 Million Over Stupid Facebook IPO

It’s generally a bad idea to base your budget on hypothetical money that may or may not end up in your pocket. It’s a much worse idea if you’re the state of California, and that money is wacky Facebook cash. More »

CE-Oh no he didn’t!: Google’s Larry Page says Facebook does a ‘really bad job’

CEOh no he didn't! Google's Larry Page says Facebook does a 'really bad job'

It’s no secret that Facebook and Google are in a war for the social web. Even so, there’s been a certain sense of decorum involved — up until a just-posted interview with Larry Page at Wired, at least. He acknowledges that Facebook is top dog in social, but is more than a little blunt in claiming that the online rival is doing a “really bad job” with its products (don’t hold back now, Larry). While he doesn’t say just what Facebook’s flaws are, he sees the Bay Area rival as entirely assailable through a unique Google approach to the category, much as Google fought past other search engines roughly a decade ago. As for other competitors, Page is also dismissive, if more diplomatic: he doesn’t see lawsuits dictating a company’s fate, and questions “how well” all-out legal assaults work in practice. We’re not expecting a direct retort from Mark Zuckerberg or anyone else, although the Facebook founder could easily contend that Graph Search speaks volumes on its own.

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Source: Wired

Instagram reports 90 million monthly active users, 40 million photos posted per day

Instagram reports 90 million monthly active users, 40 million photos posted per day

Instagram stayed mum on its current usage figures after its big Terms of Service brouhaha last month, but it’s now finally changed its tune and offered some details on its monthly active users for the first time. According to the company, that figure currently stands at 90 million, a number that AllThingsD notes is actually up ten percent from December to January — Instagram’s Kevin Systrom also tells the site that the company “continues to see very strong growth around the world.” As for how active those 90 million users are, Instagram says that they’re responsible for 40 million photos per day, along with 8,500 likes per second and 1,000 comments per second. There’s no word on a breakdown by Android and iOS users, or any further specifics, though.

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Via: AllThingsD

Source: Instagram

King.com overtakes Zynga for top spot on Facebook

You might not have heard of casual social game developing studio King.com, but they just bumped Zynga from the top spot on Facebook with their new game Candy Crush Saga. It has attracted 9.7 million daily players on Facebook so far, and King.com is now the second largest game publisher on Facebook, with over 70 million monthly active users across all of their games.

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According to AppData, Candy Crush Saga knocked Zynga’s FarmVille 2 from the number one spot, marking the first time a King.com game has been ranked number one on AppData. In total, King.com has three games in Facebook’s top 10 as far as daily active users are concerned. These are Pet Rescue Saga (with 3.2 million daily users), Bubble Witch Saga (3.6 million daily users), and obviously Candy Crush Saga.

Alex Dale, Chief Marketing Officer at King.com, says that a bug part of the company’s rapid growth and success has to do with the increased popularity casual games, and the declined interest in the resource management genre. Dale mentions that more and more people don’t have time for resource management games, so that’s why many of the Saga games have taken off.

Dale also mentions the strong appeal for puzzle games in this day and age, even after the glory days of Tetris. He mentions that “people have always liked solving puzzles,” and with the addition of a social layer, gamers are playing with friends, “which makes the experience more viral.”

[via Forbes]


King.com overtakes Zynga for top spot on Facebook is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook iPhone Messenger VoIP Feature Not Powered By Skype

facebook skype iphone messenger voip Facebook iPhone Messenger VoIP Feature Not Powered By SkypeFacebook announced yesterday its iPhone Messenger application would receive the ability to make VoIP calls in the U.S., which was previously only made available to Canadian users as a way to test the feature before rolling it out in the U.S. Seeing how friendly Facebook and Skype have been the past few years, we assumed they were behind Facebook’s Messenger app receiving the ability to make VoIP calls. It turns out, we were wrong.

Skype has confirmed it isn’t behind Facebook’s Messenger’s VoIP call feature as it absolutely does not rely on Skype’s technology. Seeing how the call quality of VoIP calls are inside of the Facebook Messenger app, we think Facebook made a big mistake as they could probably have been much better if it did use Skype for its VoIP calls.

We’re sure one day in the future, Facebook will unveil who it’s using for its VoIP calling needs, but for now, all we can do is sit back and wonder why they didn’t use Skype given how much they’ve integrated with it and Microsoft for some time now.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Alleged Samsung Galaxy S4 Spotted In Benchmarks With 8-Core Exynos 5 Chipset, Blackberry 10 Z10 Sample Photos Spotted On Flickr And Picasa,

More Facebook Results Appear On Bing Sidebar

bing sidebar More Facebook Results Appear On Bing SidebarIt was just a couple of days ago when we brought you word that Facebook will tap the power of Microsoft’s Bing to deliver Graph Search results, and here we are with a natural evolution of that effort. Apparently, Microsoft has decided to add even more Facebook results to the Bing sidebar, where this new information architecture will boast a three column design which will focus on delivering information from the web to help you decide on the next course of action when interacting with your friends without having to compromise on the core search experience.

For example, if you want to plan a trip to the Big Apple using Bing, not only will you be served search results concerning the city that never sleeps, but you will also be able to pick out information from your friends who live there currently, or have at least played tourist in the past right there in the sidebar. This means you can connect with your mates there or who have been there before for some inside tips on what to do and eat, as well as where to go. [Press Release]

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Facebook Users Uploaded 1.1 Billion Photos On New Year’s Eve/Day, Logitech UC Keyboard K725-C Announced,

Zynga Drops From Top Spot In Facebook Gaming To Candy Crush Saga

 Zynga Drops From Top Spot In Facebook Gaming To Candy Crush Saga

For a number of years, Zynga has been sitting atop the Facebook-gaming mountain as their games have always been popular ever since FarmVille. The last couple of months haven’t been too kind for the king of Facebook gaming as it’s been sued for copyright infringement by EA and has shut down a number of its titles just to save a buck. It looks like their popularity is slowly dwindling as today, we hear there’s a new king sitting atop the Facebook-gaming mountain.

King.com has officially taken the #1 spot from Zynga in the world of Facebook games as three of its titles have made it into Facebook’s top 10 list for this month. The game that has pushed FarmVille 2 out of its #1 spot is Candy Crush Saga, which is a match-3 game similar to Bejeweled. Candy Crush Saga has over 9.7 million daily players, while Zynga’s FarmVille 2 has 8.8 million.

What helps Candy Crush Saga’s popularity is the fact the game synchronizes across all devices its played on, which currently is Facebook, Android and iOS devices. Zynga released a FarmVille title last year on iOS, but had issues when it came to synching with your Facebook game. Currently there’s no FarmVille 2 game available on mobile.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: AMD invests into CiiNOW, a cloud gaming company, Facebook mixes social, gaming, and gambling in the U.K. ,

Skype: We’re not powering Facebook’s Messenger phone calls

Facebook’s new Messenger voice call feature, offering free VoIP over WiFi, is not powered by Skype‘s technology the company has confirmed, despite previous partnerships between the two. The new voice-calling Messenger app, which Facebook unveiled this week, does not rely on Skype’s back-end technology, Skype told SlashGear today. Facebook expects to roll out the feature to iOS users in the US over the course of the next few days.

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Exactly who is powering Facebook’s new VoIP service is unclear, though Skype had been a reasonable guess. The two companies partnered back in 2011 to add video calling to Facebook chat conversations in the desktop browser; a new button triggered the calls, with no extra software to download or install.

Since then, Skype has been progressively building Facebook integration into its desktop apps, including simple Facebook to Facebook video calls initiated by clicking on the user’s friend list, rather than requiring their Skype username. Now, however, the Microsoft-owned Skype is focusing more on pushing its own mobile apps, most recently releasing a version for Windows Phone.

For Facebook, VoIP service is another example of it filling in the key spots in the phone industry with its own products, as it attempts to strengthen its mobile strategy and, eventually, monetize those users who access the social network via phones and/or tablets.

Earlier this week, the company announced Facebook Graph Search, a context-powered search engine intended to give personalized results based on the activities and preferences of the users’ friends. Under the hood, Facebook uses Microsoft’s Bing search engine to power the new system.


Skype: We’re not powering Facebook’s Messenger phone calls is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Is every phone the Facebook phone?

Facebook may refuse to deliver what the rumor-mill wants – an own-brand smartphone to take on the iPhone – but that’s not to say it isn’t following a cuckoo-style mobile strategy, progressively infesting handsets from other vendors. The company’s new free voice calling service, quietly revealed in the aftermath of the Facebook Graph Search announcement, is the latest in a growing suite of mobile products that, while lacking the eye-catching appeal of a glossy slab of hardware, nonetheless shows that the social network finally has a mobile strategy.

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Before the free voice calls, there was voice messaging in the Facebook mobile app, and before that Poke, which sends time-limited text, photo, and video messages that auto-destruct and warn users if the recipient attempts to save them. Dubbed Facebook’s “sexting app” it had an early stumble after being found to secretly cache concent, though the social site did quickly move to patch the bug.

Then there was Nearby, a Foursquare-style location service, and just ahead of that Photo Sync, to make it even easier to suck photos from your phone to your Facebook gallery. That’s not to mention Facebook’s $1bn grab of Instagram, despite the fact that it had just pushed out its own Camera app which replicated most of the features of its expensive acquisition.

Facebook is seldom first to offer each mobile feature. Poke was the most obviously “inspired” product, closely following in the footsteps of earlier app Snapchat, but Google has been offering free voice calls in the US for some years now, through its Gmail voice system. (That Google deal has again been extended, now covering 2013.) Facebook Camera’s similarity to Instagram and Facebook Messenger’s overlap with the huge number of IM apps – whether iMessage, GChat, WhatsApp, or even good old fashioned SMS – hardly portray the social site as the most innovative of companies.

“Facebook isn’t some naive, cash-strapped startup”

Then again, arguably it doesn’t need to be. Facebook isn’t some naive, cash-strapped startup desperate for attention and users; it’s a multi-billion dollar business with a vast user-base much of which, despite periodic outcry and calls for mass defection, shows high degrees of addiction.

Where its been struggling is in making the most of its mobile users. That’s not the same as acquiring mobile users – in fact, Facebook has plenty already, it just hasn’t been too hot at extracting some sort of financial return from them. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has fingered commerce as one potential option, but right now everything about Facebook’s mobile suite reeks of lock-in – making users keep using Facebook, and for an increasing proportion of their everyday mobile activities – rather than revolution.

Viewed in those terms, spreading itself across the common applications regularly demanded of a smartphone (calls, messaging, photo and video sharing) makes perfect sense for Facebook. A mobile commerce push would fit in with that nicely, though we can maybe excuse Facebook for not being there yet: few manufacturers, vendors, or carriers have got commerce quite right yet.

graph_searchWhat Graph Search might do for Facebook’s mobile strategy, however, is give it an all-important injection of context. Your friends and family are arguably the best recommendation engine you know, and if they don’t know the answers themselves, they may very well have “Liked” the sites, reviews, and other sources that do. Context is another area no company has nailed so far, though Google Now is perhaps one of the better approaches we’ve seen.

There’s plenty that’s been said about the importance of controlling the hardware and the software you offer, if you want to succeed in today’s mobile market. That, we’re told, is what gives Samsung sleepless nights over Android, gives Apple its edge with the tight integration of iOS and iPhone, and what Nokia has sacrificed in throwing in with Microsoft and Windows Phone. Is it not more important, though, to own the users themselves? To have a platform considered so essential, so integral to their everyday lives, that users shape their device and service shopping lists on the basis of who supports it?

Facebook could still screw up: the mobile industry moves fast, and while that makes for interesting times both as a consumer and a company, there’s little space for second-chances if you get it wrong. For all spreading itself across dozens of apps, numerous services, and a handful of platforms might not satisfy in the gut like a Facebook phone might, though, like the cuckoo chick stealing warmth, food, and ultimately attention in a foreign nest, a strategy based on mobile inclusion is just what Facebook needs.


Is every phone the Facebook phone? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.