Facebook Home and HTC First Hands-on

It’s the Facebook phone… but it’s every phone. Facebook Home is here, and it wants to take control of your Android experience, a new software suite rather than a specific handset. Unveiled at Facebook HQ this morning, Home arrives on Android via the Play store from April 12 and splashes your photos and friends across the lockscreen and the homescreen. We’ve been playing with Facebook Home today on the HTC First, the first device to fit into Facebook’s Home Program; read on for our first-impressions.

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Facebook describes it as designing a phone around people, not apps, and the focus is the very first places you see when you turn on your device. “The homescreen is really the soul of your phone” Mark Zuckerberg said during the presentation, and Home works as that replacement launcher, with Cover Feed to make those friends your core menu, and Chat Heads to streamline talking to them.

Loading Home is like any other Android app, though it does have one extra hook into the OS. Since it’s designed as a replacement launcher, to be used instead of the regular Android one rather than alongside it, you can choose to have it open by default whenever you hit the home button on your device. At that point, consider your phone Facebookafied.

Alternatively, you can grab the HTC First, which has Home preloaded by default. Either way, the lockscreen and homescreen are swapped for Coverfeed: full-screen, chromeless pictures pulled from your friends’ updates, with discrete icons at the bottom showing “Likes” and comments. Double-tapping the image automatically likes it. Meanwhile, pulling up the bubble near the bottom of the screen – which shows your own Facebook profile picture – gives you a choice of three options: Facebook, the app launcher, and jumping back into your last-used app.

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The app launcher is basically a pared-down tray of apps, where Facebook expects you to keep your most-commonly used titles. At the top, meanwhile, there are shortcuts to add Facebook status updates or photos. A side-swipe pulls over the full app drawer from the left, from which you can drag over icons to the quick launcher tray. No widgets beyond Facebook’s own Coverfeed, however.

The other big introduction with Facebook Home is Chat Heads, a new integrated messaging system that’s designed to discretely pervade the whole device. Get a new message – whether it’s a Facebook Chat or an SMS – and a small circular bubble pops up in the upper right hand corner. You can drag it around (useful, since it’ll show up on top of any app you’re currently using it, including full-screen games) and tap it to open it, at which point a conversation view opens up floating on top of whatever you were doing.

Whether it’s a Facebook conversation or a text message one is shown by the color of the voice bubble boxes themselves, and you can have multiple conversations open at once, switching between them with the row of circles along the top. Facebook group messages are also supported, with a thumbnail of the group icons clustered in the circle. Similarly swipeable notifications include missed calls and calendar alerts.

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It’s certainly slick, as long as you live your social – and, by extension, mobile – life in Facebook. The complexity of a regular phone is hidden away under full-screen images, and the familiar iconography should prove welcoming for Facebook-addicts. Those who divide their time between multiple networks – such as Google+, or Twitter – might find those edged out, however, as Facebook Home’s notifications system is designed to cater for its own alerts, not those of others.

It certainly seems to make the most sense on a device that has been designed with Home in mind, the first of which – though Samsung, Huawei and others have committed to join in – is the HTC First. The phone itself is a slim, simple slice of soft-touch plastic, fronted with a glass 4.3-inch touchscreen above three touch-sensitive buttons for back, home, and menu. It’s also worth noting that the First does indeed support displaying all Android notifications, not just Facebook ones, and will come preloaded with Instagram.

The slightly out-of-date OS is also likely to be less of a big deal: the First hides Android 4.1 Jelly Bean under Home, running on a dualcore Snapdragon 400 processor and paired with multimode 3G/4G for roaming LTE use. AT&T will have the first taste of the First, at $99.99 with a new, two-year agreement from April 12, though it’ll also be coming to the UK and Europe on EE and Orange later in the year.

Facebook’s strategy – focusing on its software for many devices, not software and hardware for just one – does make some sense. Dedicating yourself to a single device doesn’t make sense when you want to appeal to every Facebook user who has an Android phone, after all. What remains to be seen is whether even those who are totally devoted to Facebook will be willing to immerse themselves so entirely in the experience.

Zuckerberg’s stats suggest Facebook mobile use is by far the most common thing smartphone owners are doing with their handsets. We’re not quite so convinced, and while the garden isn’t entirely walled – you can obviously get to other Android apps, they’re just not placed front and center like Facebook is – we’ve seen things like HTC’s own BlinkFeed on the HTC One giving immersive Facebook updates without also ousting every other news feed, Twitter, and other notifications. Meanwhile, the Facebook Home Program seems unlikely to take off until prepaid devices arrive; $99.99 with agreement gets you a decent smartphone these days, after all, and one which isn’t dominated by a single service, however sociable that might be.

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Facebook Home and HTC First Hands-on is written by Vincent Nguyen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook Home app vs Facebook Phone: what’s the difference?

This week the Facebook Home Android homescreen replacement experience has been revealed, and with it no lack of questions on the part of future users. While many users will be downloading Facebook Home as an app from the Google Play store, there will be a variety of smartphones being released in the coming months that have Facebook Home loaded right out of the box. The HTC first is the first of these, it also being the first smartphone to have Instagram out of the box – so what’s the difference between your experience there and your experience on the smartphone you’ve got now with Facebook Home loaded to it?

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According to Facebook, the differences are quite small at the moment – while the first answer given by the Facebook crew at the main event today was a bit dodgy, Mark Zuckerberg himself made things clear.

Any differences between downloaded version of Home vs embedded experience on the HTC first?

The new user setup experience is much cleaner, and the opportunity to get other notifications (like Spotify) is better integrated.”

Zuckerberg: we’re going to try to work with OEMs going forward to expose different hooks that aren’t normally available to Android without OEM support.

So there you have it, folks – for now the differences are essentially non-existent.

UPDATE: This point has been clarified – the downloaded version of Facebook Home will not have notifications from apps outside of Facebook in its main Cover Feed – if you purchase a Facebook Phone, any app you download will work with notifications inside Facebook Home.

With the HTC first we’re sure to see the smallest amount of difference between a downloaded experience and the handset with the software installed on it out of the box. In the future when companies like Samsung, Sony, Huawei, ZTE, Lenovo, and ALCATEL ONE TOUCH start in on the party, we might see more.

Be sure to stick around our Android Hub for more action on the smartphone front, and have a peek at the timeline below to get all the Facebook Phone sweetness!


Facebook Home app vs Facebook Phone: what’s the difference? is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

HTC First Officially Announced

HTC First Officially Announced

Facebook’s press conference is underway right now at the company’s Menlo Park headquarters. They’ve already announced Facebook Home and as rumors had suggested, HTC announced a smartphone. HTC First has now finally been unveiled and it looks exactly like its image which was leaked a day before. HTC CEO Peter Chou said at the event that the First is going to be the “ultimate social phone”, though he didn’t talk about any specifications while he was on stage. The HTC First will support AT&T’s LTE network and it is going to be available in four colors, black, white, red and pale blue.

The HTC first has a 4.3 inch display, the hardware is thin with soft edges to draw attention towards the display. Inside there’s a dualcore Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 processor with 3G/4G world and multimode LTE. The device runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean with the new Facebook Home experience. The device also has a small Facebook logo at the back. The HTC First will be available exclusively from AT&T from April 12th for $99.99. Pre-orders begin today. HTC First will also be available in Europe on EE and Orange.

HTC First is a pretty standard smartphone, they are no special features that make it stand out of the crowd, save for the fact that it ships with Facebook Home and Instagram pre-installed. As previously mentioned, the First has a Qualcomm MSM8930 1.4Ghz dualcore processor with 1GB of RAM. It has 16GB of internal storage. It is 4.96 x 2.56 x 0.35 (inches) in dimensions and it has a 4.3 inch display with a resolution of 1280×720 pixels. It weighs 4.37 ounces. There’s a 5 megapixel camera with LED flash on the back, capable of 4X digital zoom. It can capture 1080p HD video and can play back 720p HD on the device. A 1.6 megapixel camera can be found on the front. As far as connectivity is concerned, the HTC First supports near field communication or NFC, has Bluetooth 4.0, 4G LTE and Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n compatibility. The device can be used as a mobile hotspot for up to 8 devices. Power is provided by a 2000 mAh non-removable battery, which provides an estimated talk time of 14.3 hours and a standby time of 18.2 days.

HTC First Officially Announced HTC First Officially Announced HTC First Officially Announced By Ubergizmo. Related articles: LG Optimus 4X HD Gets Android 4.1 Jelly Bean In Europe, HTC One Developer Edition Arrives This April 19th,

HTC First: Pure Facebook Phone (Update: Hands On)

The HTC First is a new smartphone that’s deeply integrated with Facebook Home. The AT&T phone runs on a modified version of Jelly Bean and it’s the only phone to come pre-loaded with Facebook Home. More »

Meet The HTC First, The First Android Phone To Come Preloaded With Facebook Home

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The torrent of leaks these past few days haven’t left much to the imagination, but HTC’s Peter Chou has just officially pulled back the curtain on the first phone to ship with Facebook Home — the HTC First — at Facebook’s Menlo Park headquarters.

According to HTC CEO Peter Chou the First will be the “ultimate social phone,” though he declined to dig into the device’s specs during his brief moments on-stage. The device will ship in four colors, and will support AT&T’s LTE network right out of the gate. Can’t wait for your chance to take it for a spin? The First will be available for $99 (with a 2 year contract naturally) starting on April 12, and pre-orders for the device kick off today. Those of you outside the U.S. will be able to join in the fun shortly too, as Mark Zuckerberg also noted that the phone would find its way to UK carriers Orange and EE in short order.




The mid-range First will be available in black, white, red and blue, and sports a 4.3-inch display that jibes with earlier reports. Facebook Home obviously serves to obscure the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean build that’s actually running the show, while one of Qualcomm’s dual-core Snapdragon 400 chipsets (and not the MSM8960 that was previously reported) provides the horsepower from inside that smooth, curved chassis. It’s not a bad looking phone and the internals aren’t quite as lousy as many had expected them to be, but all this begs a very important question — will anyone actually buy this phone when you can fire up Facebook Home on your (supported) Android handset for a whopping zero dollars?

I mean, c’mon — I’m a sucker for even mildly neat hardware, but so far neither HTC nor AT&T (whose CEOs both appeared on-stage to talk about how darned great the thing is) could provide a compelling reason why it’s worth buying. LTE? A handsome design? Neither of those are exactly hard to come by these days, are they? Facebook has said that the First will feature better integration for all those notifications you’re bound to get than if you had just installed the app, but at this point there’s little way of knowing how big a difference it’ll actually make. HTC knows how to make great hardware and I don’t mean to diminish that, but a lame device that’s been put together well is still a lame device.

This marks the second time that the social networking giant and the beleaguered Taiwanese OEM have collaborated on a peculiar hardware play. The first, if you’ll recall, were HTC Status (nee Chacha) and the Salsa released back in 2011– their main claim to fame was a dedicated Facebook button for quick access to your friends and feeds. Considering that neither device was exactly a runaway hit, it’s no surprise to see that Facebook and HTC have taken things in a different, more substantial direction with the One. Of course, the First is going to be the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Facebook Home devices — Zuckerberg also pointed to a Facebook Home Program which allows hardware manufacturers to build Facebook Home into their own forthcoming handsets.

AT&T Mobility CEO spotted at Facebook Phone event

This morning as we prepare to enter the Android-centric Facebook event, we’ve spotted no less than Ralph de la Vega himself: AT&T Mobility President and CEO. As the mobile carrier’s president steps into Building 16 at 1 Hacker Way, it essentially means a lock for a real-deal Facebook Phone coming up later today.

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What we’ve heard thus far – unofficially, of course – is that there will be a Facebook-centric smartphone coming carried by AT&T with full 4G LTE data onboard. With the appearance of de la Vega, we’ve got another piece to the puzzle that is the official reveal!

UPDATE: Ralph de la Vega is the President and CEO of AT&T Mobility, not just AT&T as a whole. Also note – Qualcomm has been spotted at this event as well!

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The official event begins at 10:00 AM PST – that’s less than an hour away! This event promises to be the home of not only a smartphone, but a full Facebook software experience as well. We’ll be front and center as Facebook reveals their next-generation in mobile excellence, and perhaps once and for all gives the Android world a taste of the full-function Facebook app experience iOS has had for so long!

Check the timeline below for more information on the Facebook event we’re about to jump into, and don’t forget to keep your eyes peeled in the Facebook tag portal as well! The Android Hub you’ve loved for so long is bumping wildly today too – make with the clicks!


AT&T Mobility CEO spotted at Facebook Phone event is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The Engadget Interview: HTC President of Global Sales Jason MacKenzie

The Engadget Interview HTC President of Global Sales Jason McKenzie

Shortly after Facebook’s big reveal this morning, we caught up with HTC President of Global Sales Jason McKenzie and spent a few minutes with him discussing the First. As expected, he was pretty excited about this collaboration between his company, Facebook and AT&T. Jason revealed to us that HTC’s strategy involves ultimately catering the First to hardcore (or at least frequent) users of the social network, whereas a device like the One will be more appealing to those who aren’t interested in staying constantly connected. Interestingly, HTC seems to have put Facebook in the driver’s seat here, as the First will not only come pre-loaded with Facebook Home (and its firmware optimizations), but no sign of Sense anywhere. It’s certainly a departure from HTC’s usual branding efforts, so it’ll be intriguing to see exactly how well the device sells on AT&T. We have our full interview with Jason below, so take a few minutes to get the First scoop.

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HTC First hands-on (update: video)

After endless months of speculation, the collaboration between HTC and Facebook has finally been revealed to the world. It’s not a Facebook Phone per se, it’s simply a skinned Android smartphone that just so happens to bestow deep social media integration upon the OS, a move which makes the First — as well as future devices that feature the newly announced Facebook Home interface — an appropriate candidate for the term. The First will be available April 12th for $100 on AT&T, but it can be pre-ordered starting today.

While Facebook Home is taking the spotlight, let’s examine the first piece of hardware it will be featured on. On the spec sheet, the First isn’t going to take anybody’s breath away: it’s a midrange phone with 1.4GHz dual-core Snapdragon 400 processor, 1GB RAM, 5MP rear camera and 1.6MP front-facing cam, Android 4.1 and a 4.3-inch 720p display. We’re just getting our hands on the device right now and will continue to offer up our First impressions, along with a full gallery of images.

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The Daily Roundup for 04.03.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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We’re liveblogging Facebook’s Android event tomorrow at 1PM ET!

We're liveblogging Facebook's Android event tomorrow at 1PM ET!

The term “Facebook Phone” has been used in association with specific devices for over four years, and each time it’s involved phones with tighter integration of the social media network rather than an Facebook-branded device. Tomorrow we’ll be hearing about yet another one of these handsets, though rumor has it that the gadget in question — which may or may not be called the HTC First — will at least fit the description better than ever before, offering a home screen launcher and other Android services dedicated to the Facebook cause. We’re just as curious as you as to what exactly will be shown off in Menlo Park 24 hours from now, and we’ll be there to liveblog the event so you can discover the goods right along with us! Join us at 1PM ET.

April 4, 2013 1:00 PM EDT

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