Well the Facebook Development Keynote is what we came for but in all honesty the interview was a bit waste of time. It was like watching someone famous getting chatted up by their biggest fan. (she has just wrote a book about him which she plugged on several occasions)I do feel for Sarah Lacey as it really did seem like she was committing career suicide
as the crowd became more and more hostile and Mark Zuckerberg even at one point said to her that you do need to ask me some questions (at which point applause broke out for at least a minute). Once she realised the crowd had turned she declared “In true digg style I will open it up to the audience” and some decent questions started coming out.Such was the scale of the PR fallout that Facebook had another Q and A session at the The Pangaea where he answered a series of more questions of which the video will uploaded to later. Great news though the eccommerce platform is being built and will be available soon. We will upload the video footage of this in the coming days but for now we are off to the Great British Booze Up party.
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As someone who is constantly on Facebook for work, I manage to quite easily stay on top of any requests or notifications that come my way. I had assumed that this was the case with everyone, but had recently started to notice that a lot of my friends were piling up notifications and messages due to the fact that most of the time they’re invitations to applications that someone was forced to send or messages from groups that nobody cares about.
These are very similar to the reasons why most people abandoned Myspace, the endless friend requests from fake users.
Today Facebook took a step towards keeping it’s userbase happy, adding an ‘Ignore All’ button for users that have more than 25 notifications. I can’t help but think this pretty much defeats the object of having notifications, and seems to assume that all notifications are spam, but at least it shows that they are working on something to fight this problem. I think a more relevant solution would be to block applications from forcing users to invite 20 friends before using an application instead, but we’ll see where this one goes.
Via allfacebook
Facebook application developers are continually informed that no guarantees are made as to the status of the Facebook platform so, should any errors occur, there can be no real complaints. In fact, erros with the platform are frequent, with many developers of more complex applications fearing the weekly “Platform Update” like some kind of plague.
Yesterday, however, there seemed to be an even larger problem than normal, with most applications failing to load 9 out of 10 times. Facebook generally carry out updates in the dead of night (US time) but for some reason yesterday, the problems continued throughout the day, with users seeing an error message instead of the application. The problem with the error message is that it put a large amount of blame for the failure on the application developer, who, in this case, was not the one to blame.
As with any piece of beta software, you must expect there to be bugs with the Facebook platform as they strive to introduce great new features that not only improve the user experience but also make things easier for the developer (eg. the latest animations scripts). However the Facebook platform is different from most other beta software in that there is a great deal of money on it. Application developers are making a lot of money on advertising and selling source code, and Facebook’s own social ads are flooded with adverts for applications, netting them a fair few quid.
I don’t think yesterdays errors will mark any kind of change in the way things go in terms of Facebook app development, and in fact it may have only got me angry because I was working on the platform at the time, but I thin Facebook need to seriously review the way they update their platform if they want to keep developers on their side.
