Timeline, Open Graphs introduced at Facebook f8 conference

Shawn Knight

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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced two key features for the social network at the annual f8 developer conference in San Francisco, California. Timeline and an updated version of Open Graphs are expected to revolutionize Facebook moving forward and change the way we share things with friends.

The first is Timeline which was created to address a need to share older status updates and other important events in your life. Current status updates get “pushed off a cliff” and are lost forever once they leave your profile. 

Zuckerberg said the original Facebook profile represented the first five minutes of your life if you were to introduce yourself to someone new and your stream consisted of the next 15 minutes in your story. Timeline is described as the next step in telling your personal life story.

With Timeline, your entire life story can be told on a single page, dating back as far as you would like. The page layout resembles a personal blog with a large cover photo at the top followed by important updates listed in reverse chronological order as you scroll down through the page. Facebook automatically selects the most important updates and highlights them with a blue dot. Grey dots represent hidden updates that might not be as important.

Users can arrange their Timeline however they see fit by removing certain updates or highlighting others that might be important to them. Various filters can be applied to Timeline such as photos or maps of where you have been. Timeline will be rolling out progressively over the next couple of months.

The next major feature is an update to Open Graphs which brings a new class of apps that encompass multiple features in an effort to better link friends. Open Graphs allow you to share things like music, movies and news using the new ticker on the right side of Facebook in real time in what the company calls real time serendipity.

timeline open graphs facebook music service

As was speculated last month and leaked yesterday, one of these new Open Graph features involves music.

Facebook has teamed with more than a dozen streaming music providers such as Spotify, Rdio and Vevo to bring music listening and sharing to Facebook. You will be able to see what your friends are listening to in the ticker and furthermore, you can tune in live to listen to exactly what they are hearing.

But music isn’t the only service that is getting the Open Graph treatment. Netflix CEO Reed Hastings took the stage to announce that his company was just one of nearly two dozen video providers that were launching Facebook apps designed to share what users were watching with their friends. News outlets, game developers and lifestyle app creators are also joining the Open Graph network. Zuckerberg believes this will be the next big way to spread the word about varying types of media socially.

Media apps for Open Graph are launching right now while other apps such as lifestyle and games will slowly be released alongside Timeline.

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You don't use Facebook? I don't know if that is something to brag about. It sounds like you need to ride your horse and buddy on down to Best Buy, grab a Dell and get connected to some friends!
 
All this crap only appeals to the "OOOO shiney!" crowd. 99% of Facebook users just want something that they can keep in contact with people.
 
We WANT to only show the last 15 minutes of our time on FB and be able to go further back OURSELVES like we do now. We DO NOT want the world to see and hear what we're listening to. We don't WANT FB to decide for us what is important and what isn't.

We want it the way it was. Showing posts in the order that they are written. They are POSTS not "stories". This isn't a news feed with someone else deciding what stories are important. It's important for me to have things in order so we can find older posts. If we couldn't find a post, we used to be able to go to a person's name and find it. That convenient thing is gone now. You're not FIXING anything. You're making it so irritating that I think Google will suddenly have a lot more users. They will benefit from your messing up something that isn't broken.

Too bad we have no choice in what private things we want to share and to whom we share it. Too bad you took a nice, fun site and ruined it. We have been able to connect with friends and relatives that we moved away from ten years ago and too bad we will lose touch again because of your messing things up.
 
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