*Here are my notes of this session. Usual disclaimers apply.*
Harnessing social analytics and other musings on the Facebook API
In the lights of OpenSocial, tough week to be talking about Facebook.
Ankur and Gi are going to talk about a variety of good things that they’ve done with the Facebook platform.
Understanding human relationships.
Facebook is a truly social platform, which allows to create truly social applications. Engage with your friends directly. Ability for a company to respond to the social content inside the platform.
Questions:
– where were they? (Facebook)
– where we are? (developers)
– what’s everyone doing?
– where’s it all going?
Geek + pizza = Facebook.
7000 applications. SuperWall, Slide, Top Friends, iLike, Flixter, Likeness — successful!
*steph-note: Ankur is speaking a little fast for me and I have a headache, so I’m not following this very well, sorry*
Applications kept in a controlled environment. The back-end to all those applications is the same.
Doesn’t depend where your engaging with your users as long as you are.
Standardised facebook functions => very compact code. Homogenous look (avoids the “MySpace effect”)
Bob Dylan application.
PHP. API easy to use. *steph-note: maybe I should build a Facebook app… not sure about what though!*
Standardised component set.
Big question: does the platform really break? Facebook’s innovation is so quick that things break.
A short note on viral-ness. A phenomenon, from 50 friends to 50’000 users in a week. It can happen… but. The Dylan application allows you to share something with others. Individuals make applications spread more than other users.
Facebook allows users to spam their friends with applications.
My Questions: 450’000 daily active users.
Socialistics. Information about your friends.
*steph-note: ew, sorry, I’m passing out. Nothing to do with the content of this session, quite interesting.*
Little Facebook API vs. OpenSocial moment.
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- LIFT08: Kevin Marks (Google Open Social: The Social Cloud) [en] (2008)
- Lars Trieloff: i18n for Web 2.0 (Web 2.0 Expo, Berlin) [en] (2007)
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