Facebook debuted its Android app family Facebook Home today. This means those of you with compatible devices (sorry Windows Phone and iOS users) have a snazzy new product to try out if you’re looking ...
Do you want people, not apps, at the center of your mobile experience? April 9, 2013 — -- People. Not apps. That's really the crux of Facebook Home, a new Facebook-first software experience that ...
With a billion users, it'd be an understatement to say Facebook has done a good job conquering the desktop world. Mobile, however, is the social network's next frontier: although it has a significant ...
Facebook Home is, without a doubt, Facebook’s most ambitious and inventive play for our mobile attention. Since filing its S-1 papers last year, the social network’s need to capture this market has ...
Wall Street hailed the news that Facebook had a plan for increasing engagement on mobile devices that didn't involve manufacturing a phone. Investors bid Facebook's shares up almost 3 percent ...
Starting today, you can have a Facebook phone — and all you need is your current Android phone and about five minutes. Facebook Home, a suite of apps that replaces the homescreen of your Android phone ...
Facebook's sparkling new interface for Android phones takes a bit of getting used to, but features like Chat Heads impress as immediately useful for dedicated social device users. MENLO PARK, CALIF.
Is your smartphone social? Facebook isn't convinced it is and so, in lieu of one true Facebook Phone, it wants to make over every Android smartphone in its image, courtesy of Facebook Home. The new ...
If you have a Microsoft Surface Pro running Windows 8 operating system (OS) you would have already seen a similar version of the way Facebook Home works. Several things make Facebook's Home ...
Mark Zuckerberg proudly showed off Facebook's new Home app recently; an Android home screen replacement that pushes network updates to the phone. Facebook Home is designed to provide a constant stream ...
There’s been a lot of buzz lately about development teams using their own software–known as “eating your own dogfood”–in order to cultivate empathy for their users. After all, if the team doesn’t use ...
is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. Home hasn't been updated since January Facebook tells The Verge that there is in fact still a team ...