Monday, April 28, 2014

A look into Facebook’s f8

Zuckf8_2011

On Wednesday, Facebook’s f8 — a developer’s haven — will return to San Francisco after a three-year absence, this time powered by Parse.


In the past, Facebook has used this conference to announce features such as the Open Graph, Facebook Connect (now Facebook Login) and Timeline. Facebook notes that this year’s f8 will be different (though reports show that Facebook will announce a mobile ad network Wednesday), with a strong focus on the developer community.


A Facebook spokesperson discussed this year’s conference with Inside Facebook:


We’re getting back to our roots and reinventing f8 as a conference purely for developers to learn how to use Facebook and Parse to build, grow, and monetize their apps.



Let’s take a look back at Facebook has launched or announced at past events.




2007


At the first f8 conference, Facebook launched Platform, with 65 app developers. Within three weeks, 10 applications grew by more than 1 million users each. A month after launch, Facebook’s traffic rose 35 percent. Justin Smith, former Editor of Inside Facebook, wrote in 2007 about the launch of Platform:


On May 25, Facebook unveiled the “Facebook Platform” at f8 in San Francisco. Dozens of apps were showcased from several launch partners. Breaking from the command-and-control approach to third party widgets employed by others at the time, the Platform allowed deeper integration points than any other API, and allowed anyone to sign up and start developing–and keep all the revenue. Hundreds of developers gathered for an all-day hack-a-thon to kick the tires on the new Platform, and by the end of the year, over 10,000 applications had been launched.



f8_2008


2008


The conference returned the next year, as Facebook announced Facebook Connect to the world. This allowed users to log into external apps and sites using their Facebook profile information. By the time the 2008 f8 rolled around, there were 33,000 apps on Facebook platform. Among the launch partners of Facebook Connect: Digg, Six Apart, Citysearch, Amiando, CBS.com, CNET, CollegeHumor, Disney-ABC Television Group, Evite, Flock, Hulu, Kongregate, Loopt, Plaxo, Radar, Red Bull, Seesmic, Socialthing!, StumbleUpon, The Insider, Twitter, Uber, Vimeo and Xobni.


CEO Mark Zuckerberg talked about Facebook Connect at the 2008 event:


We think we’re at a point today where things are going to decentralize quite a bit, and we want to push this forward. We think the best way to do this is to build the core platform, the feed infrastructure, and a variety of communication mechanisms. But we fully expect that in the future less of this is going to happen on Facebook.com and more is going to happen on others’ applications. This year, we’re going to push for parity between what applications inside Facebook can do, and what applications outside Facebook can do.



2009


No f8 conference was held.


f8_2010


2010


Facebook launched social plugins in 2010, allowing people to Like content on external sites such as CNN, ESPN and IMDB. Facebook also announced Open Graph protocol — a new way of structuring data on the web with semantic markup — and Graph API, which allowed developers to get information on any object in the Facebook graph.


In addition to the Like button plugin, Facebook also announced the Activity Stream, Recommendations, Facebook Login and Social Bar plugins.


Smith wrote about the Like button plugin in 2010:


The Like button is the simplest social plugin. No login is required, and it will run in an iframe. Even if you’ve never visited CNN before, you’ll get social context when you visit the site. Now, when users show up to sites that use it, you can see which of your friends like the site, or have engaged with it recently, without the site knowing anything about you. And when users like anything, it automatically gets added to the list of things they like on their profile.



f8_2011


2011


The most recent f8 was held in 2011. After a humorous presentation by Zuck lookalike Andy Samberg, Facebook launched Timeline and Open Graph, giving both users and app developers new ways to showcase information. Timeline, which has since been redesigned, allowed users to really take ownership of what is on their profile pages. Through Open Graph technology, developers could automatically publish activity through a Facebook user. This allowed apps such as Spotify to grow rapidly, as news of a user’s activity was published in the ticker, enticing their friends to download the app.


In the week after 2011′s conference, Spotify gained 1 million new Facebook users.


2012-2013


No conferences were held.


All images courtesy of Facebook’s f8 page.


Source: Inside Facebook



A look into Facebook’s f8

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