Monday, December 9, 2013

Facebook sympathise button alternative to the like button



Digest:  Facebook has devised a "sympathise" button as an alternative to the "like" button for use in certain situations.


The problem is solved for when you've seen something ... but can't 'like' it. Users have been demanding a “Dislike” button for a long time. The social network evidently hears their complaints: During a Facebook hackathon held "a little while back," an engineer devised a "sympathize" button that would accompany gloomier status updates, according to Dan Muriello, a different Facebook engineer who described the hackathon experiment at a company event Thursday. If someone selected a negative emotion like "sad" or "depressed" from Facebook's fixed list of feelings, the "like" button would be relabeled "sympathize."


How does Facebook’s sympathize button work?
It would work something like this. When a user selects a negative emoticon such as “depressed” or “sad”, the Like button would automatically be relabeled as “Sympathize.” However, it won’t make its way to the site anytime soon, says Muriello. He said his fellow engineers are enthusiastic about the creation, but it needs to undergo rigorous analysis and testing before reaching the site.

 



Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Facebook updates its News Feed



Digest: Facebook will begin adding related links with news stories, to help users find more content. Also, older stories generating newer comments will bump back up near the top of News Feeds. 




Facebook is boosting its efforts to put more news in its News Feed. That is, real news from the news media, rather than status updates from friends.

Statement from Varun Kacholia, Facebook's engineering manager, and software engineer Minwen Ji: “Starting soon, we'll be doing a better job of distinguishing between a high quality article on a website versus a meme photo hosted somewhere other than Facebook when people click on those stories on mobile.”


Facebook will tweak the way its displays articles in user News Feeds: "This means that high quality articles you or others read may show up a bit more prominently in your News Feed, and meme photos may show up a bit less prominently," the engineers wrote on blog post



 

Sony's PlayStation 4 sales reach 2.1 million units


Summary: Sony's PlayStation 4 has hit another important milestone, it now Serving 2.1 Million Users Worldwide
  


Sony on Tuesday announced that global PlayStation 4 sales have reached 2.1 million units worldwide. The company was quick to point out that the tally includes actual sales to consumers and not merely shipments into the retail channel.

Andrew House, President and Group CEO, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. said that it has been the best launch in PlayStation history. He added that “Demand remains incredibly strong and continues to overwhelm the supply worldwide, but we are diligently working to meet those growing demands and to deliver additional PS4 units to our retail partners throughout the holiday season”.

The InfoScout console sales charts break down like this: