Tag Archives for Social Networking

Facebook Launches Open Source Initiative

Facebook Opensource

Facebook plans open-source platform to assist application developers.  Facebook said that as the new Platform continues to mature, open sourcing the infrastructure behind it is a natural step so developers can build richer social applications and share what they’ve learned with the ecosystem.

Facebook has announced it will make its third-party developer platform open source which could be a huge step toward breaking down the wall between its site and the rest of the web.

“We’re working on an open-source initiative that is meant to help application developers better understand Facebook Platform and more easily build applications, whether it’s by running their own test servers, building tools, or optimizing their applications. As Facebook Platform continues to mature, open-sourcing the infrastructure behind it is a natural step so developers can build richer social applications and share what they’ve learned with the ecosystem. Additional details will be released soon,” a spokesperson said.

Applications developed on the Facebook Platform would be compatible with any social network that maps its application programming interfaces (APIs) to Facebook.

Facebook has been sending out mixed signals after cutting off Google’s Friend Connect, but it also just announced a feature called Facebook Connect, which lets users access their Facebook identity on any site.

Google Inc. is expected to shed light on its own social technologies such as Google App Engine, for building and hosting Web applications, and OpenSocial, the Google-backed application programming interface (API) for social networking. Continue Reading »

Will Facebook Join OpenSocial?

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This morning, Yahoo announced that it is joining OpenSocial, and along with MySpace and Google, forming the OpenSocial Foundation to “ensure the neutrality and longevity of OpenSocial as an open, community-governed specification for building social applications across the web.”

Additionally, on the conference call executives indicated that Hi5 will be launching its developer platform with support for OpenSocial applications next Monday, meaning that the initiative will soon allow you to build apps that in theory work on MySpace, Orkut, and hi5 – a fairly significant base of users.

Meanwhile, Facebook announced its own set of standards back in December based on its platform, which, Bebo leveraged to allow developers to port their Facebook apps over to its network. In turn, there are now two standards with huge players behind them, with OpenSocial having the majority of partners, but Facebook having the majority of actual applications that people can use.

Will Facebook ultimately sign on to OpenSocial, or will we be living in a world with two (or more) major social networking platforms for the forseeable future?

Facebook’s collision course with the big portals

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Mark Zuckerberg describes Facebook as a service designed to help people communicate better, primarily through the social graph, which is the network of connections and relationships between people.

The social graph, he said, is the reason Facebook works. The popular social applications, such as Flirtable, FunWall and SuperPoke, built on the Facebook platform, are only a small part of Facebook’s bigger ambition to help people communicate better.

In fact, Facebook is on a collision course with the more mature Web colonies–AOL, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo.

One of the key metrics of a major portal is stickiness–the number of applications used per member and time spent on the site. Communications services, such as e-mail, instant messaging, group chat, and forums, have proven to be very sticky.

Facebook is about to introduce a basic chat service and have some rudimentary e-mail capabilities. While Facebook executives have been cagey about specific plans to build more capable communications applications, they will evolve to be competitive with what AOL, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo offer. Continue Reading »