Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Facebook Has Taken Over The Planet!

By Alex Blaken


Facebook has recently revealed the launch of its messaging service. A lot more than just the simplistic Facebook chat which their customers are accustomed to, this new service will most significantly offer an '@facebook.com' email.

Up until this point, we all have seen many email services take center stage. The 1990s saw a huge amount of portal sites supplying email addresses. The most important suppliers were AOL, Yahoo and Hotmail. It's hard to imagine yet at this time, email accounts possessed relatively small data capacities. Even heading into the 00s we continued to see caps on mailbox size. Yet, Google, with the release of Gmail, promised unlimited mailbox space. Paired with a clean, uncluttered layout it has developed into one of the top participants in the email industry. Its higher level service made various other email companies develop their own services and design.

Step forward, Facebook. The online community has become a zeitgeist for the decade. In just a number of years people have observed it move from a closed, exclusive social network for college students to a worldwide sensation with more than 500 million members and commonly ranks inside of the top 2 favorite sites for numerous countries. Facebook has promised to give each and every member an '@facebook.com' email address.

You may well think, so what? It's merely an email, similar to so many others that exist. Nevertheless, this suggests much more. Facebook is now stepping out of the social network market and branching out straight into the world of communicating. This is very significant. In the event that almost all 500 million members get a Facebook email address it will become the largest webmail supplier in the world. And since text-based communication is becoming increasingly more important than direct speech conversations, you can easily imagine how Facebook will soon become a lot more than just a place to chat to friends or spy on your exes.

When this has been released worldwide, just what next for? One of many key aspects of the Internet is the utility factor - the best way to use the Internet to make certain jobs simpler for you to complete. One of the primary strengths of the Internet is its ability to allow you to manage your time and energy and control duties better. Facebook could certainly make a further advance directly into this territory by providing people a personal homepage which they may use as their stating place on the web. We've seen, with Facebook Connect, Facebook's attempt at being a username and password manager. It could offer a standalone password manager program for websites that don't offer Facebook Connect yet. Additionally, as a personalized homepage it could offer an online bookmarking program enabling you to save your bookmarks. It could possibly even enter the Internet browser sector and release a web browser!




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