Java One India 2013 Returns...!!!
It’s great to see that a dedicated JavaOne conference is going to happen!! Hope this momentum will keep going and hope to see developers sharing knowledge after the event. Join JavaOne India 2013 8-9 May in Hyderabad at JavaOne India. You can Sign up here http://bit.ly/YMPeJ8 to find out more details and launch date for the 2013 JavaOne.
Fb's new messaging system: More than just email?
The company today is introducing a three-pronged system that strives to not necessarily change the way we communicate but to make it more efficient, more personal and definitely simpler. And, of course, Facebook wants to make it seamless across the platforms and devices we’re already using.
At a press event in San Francisco this morning, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg stressed that this is not “Facebook email,” which was the general belief in the guessing game that surrounded this event. Yes, everyone will soon have the option of securing an @facebook.com email address if they so choose - but it’s more than that. He said:
We’re using a mechansism that’s much simpler, like SMS or IM. We spent a lot of time building a handful of products that fit what we think of as a modern day messaging system.
At the heart of it all is the “social inbox,” a place where messages - again,not just email - are housed and filtered. Because Facebook already knows who your “friends” are, it can filter messages that it believes to be important to you. Everything else - not necessarily junk but maybe a newsletter or a bank statement or something from a family member who’s not on Facebook - goes into an “other” folder
And if one of those messages from a friend would be better for the “other” folder or a message from someone who landed in “other” should be in the social inbox, the user can move them back and forth, adjusting how those emails are handled in the future.
In terms of the seamless integration that Zuckerberg and team talked about, the idea is that users should be able to have an IM appear as an SMS or an SMS appear as an email, giving people a way to use the communication tool they prefer without worrying about how the recipient will see it or respond to it.
That can be pretty powerful. The company said the rollout to users will be a slow one - over the next couple of months - and initially will be spread via invitations. The idea is to let people get used to it and offer some feedback to Facebook about it.
Overall, I like what Facebook is doing here. For some time now, I’ve been squawking about how cumbersome and inefficient email continues to be - despite some of the breakthroughs that companies like Yahoo and Google have been pitching lately, such as Gmail’s Priority Inbox.
The jury will be out for a bit on whether Facebook’s effort is a winning solution or whether people will actually start using it. Zuckerberg stressed that no one at Facebook is expecting users to dump their Gmail or Yahoo mail accounts any time soon.
But the idea that some users, including the younger users who already prefer SMS and Facebook over traditional email systems, will shift the winds for future generations is something that makes me hopeful - hopeful that the clunky e-mail systems of today will someday be history.
ZUCKERBERG was a Harvard graduate and during his college times he created a site called "facemash" which let other people choose who is looking good from the available photos which were alleged that,they have been uploaded with out their permission.so it was forced to shutdown but the students opined that there must be a site which host their photos and details and mark ZUCKERBERG along with his other mates setup the site The Photo Address Book which students referred to as “The Facebook.” which grabbed the attention of people from surroundings,other cities,states,countries and it spread world wide.initially it was allowed only to harvard students then to students of other universities and now the eligibility criteria is "above 13 yr old"
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