Facebook Lite

  • 11 Sep
  • 2009
Posted by: Rory

Facebook , the second most visited website on the internet, behind Google, with over 240 million users you’d think that it couldn’t get much better. Unfortunately though, some of us like me just don’t use all of the features that Facebook provides, to be honest the things that I do use are fairly basic and I really don’t need the “excess baggage” that Facebook provides.

All is not lost though, because Facebook being a nice company who listens to the wants and needs of it’s customers has introduced Facebook Lite – a version of Facebook that isn’t as graphic intensive, one that doesn’t constantly bug you about people asking you to tell them what you think about them through stupid little quizzes and apps that just get right on my nerves.

Facebook launches a Lite Version of it's service.

Facebook launches a Lite Version of it's service.

So, Facebook Lite, what about it?  Well, you can access it via www.lite.facebook.com, and it’s just come out today (in the UK) and is now in beta. It lets you do the bare basics of Facebook such as:

  • Add Friends, Pictures and Videos
  • Edit your profile
  • See events
  • Read your mail
  • See your news feed
  • Post Updates
  • Change Settings
  • Search for friends
  • Write on walls
  • Comment / like updates and pictures
  • Become Fans of Pages

If there’s something not on that list that you like to do on Facebook, then just don’t use it, but if all that is adequate enough for you then, I’d strongly recommend that you use it.

On another note – it’s very zippy, even on mobile broadband. Page load speeds and getting around the whole system is a lot easier compared to the normal Facebook, when on mobile broadband – you’d think that they’d made it for us mobile users! So if you’re like me and use mobile broadband, then it’s a must.

Oh and lastly: vanity URLs still work, so to see my profile and to add me as a friend, visit lite.facebook.com/roryclapham.

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Internet Branding

  • 24 Jul
  • 2009
Posted by: Rory

Social media and viral marketing are now just about, if not more crucial to any business who has an online presence. Mars Inc’s move to change the way we think about a brand website is quite impressive and if not ingenious. If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s basically just a network of lots of different social media websites, including YouTube, Twitter, Flickr, Wikipedia and others.

When you go onto the website, for some reason, which I haven’t quite grasped yet there’s a form which asks you for your age, it’s not like they’re selling alcohol or anything. Any ideas anyone? After that there’s this annoying little frame that’s placed over the page which you can’t move around, it contains links to product information and so forth. You can minimise the box, but it is still annoying when it gets in the way.

The centrepiece of the new Skittles website.

The centrepiece of the new Skittles website.

Some links are drop down – it’s like a 50 / 50 mix. Home just takes you to Flickr with images of Skittles, Products is drop down with Wikipedia links as pages, Media is drop down with Pictures and Videos – Flickr and Youtube respectively. On the bottom line we then get chatter, which is Twitter (surprise, surprise), Friends is Facebook fans and Contact is just a plain old contact page hosted on their server.

There’s a few questions that spring to mind for me about the whole website after looking at it:

  1. It’s a good way of pushing bandwidth away from their servers – the people going on their website are only loading 1 page, but what do the social media hosts think of it?
  2. What if one of these websites goes down? It’s unlikely but technology does fail, so what then? Just dead pages?
  3. Something that annoys me is that they don’t explain it well enough, so someone who isn’t tech savvy or doesn’t understand or use social media might find themselves lost, how do they begin to explain how to use Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, Wikipedia, and Flickr all in one concise “read me”?
  4. There’s also a little box that appears telling you that you can exit the website at any time, but while it’s up you can’t follow any of the links which is quite annoying, why? Surely people can figure out if they want to leave the site they just do what they normally do?

(more…)

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