Facebook to unveil its ‘home’ on Android phone
San Francisco:
Facebook Inc. unveils its “home” on the Android smartphone on Thursday, a move expected to tie the leading social network’s services tightly into mobile software.
Invitations to a press event at Facebook’s main campus in
the Silicon Valley city of Menlo Park rekindled talk of a “Facebook
phone,” but analysts say the social network wants to spread roots across
the Android platform.
Facebook’s invitation says only: “Come See Our New Home On Android.”
Technology news site TechCrunch predicted the
announcement would be a modified version of Android with “deep native
Facebook functionality” on a phone made by Taiwan’s HTC.
Android, the free mobile operating system from Google Inc,
accounted for 51.2% of US smartphone sales in the three-month period
ending in February, according to freshly-released survey results from
Kantar Worldpanel ComTech.
Android added 5.9 percentage points from a year earlier, while Apple’s share fell 3.5 points to 43.5%.
Windows Phone, boosted by the new operating system introduced last year from Microsoft Corp., increased its share to 4.1%.
Facebook has made a priority of following its more than
one billion members onto smartphones and tablet computers, tailoring
services and money-making ads for mobile devices.
“It is really clear from the stats and my own personal
intuition that a lot of energy in the ecosystem is going to mobile, not
desktop (computers),” Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg said in September.
“That is the future.”
Zuckerberg rejected suggestions that Facebook would make
its own smartphone, adamant that the company had no intention of
stepping into the fiercely competitive handset hardware arena.
“Apple, Google, everyone builds phones—we are going in the opposite direction,” Zuckerberg said at the time.
“We want to build a system deeply integrated in every device people want to use.”
HTC forming an alliance with Facebook makes sense since
the handset maker could capitalize on the social network’s marketing
power in an Android arena dominated by Samsung, according to Silicon
Valley analyst Rob Enderle.
“It is not so much a Facebook phone as imagined by
Zuckerberg as it is a lifeline for HTC, which needs a champion device
and got Facebook to back it,” Enderle said.
“The market has been gravitating towards Samsung,” the
analyst continued. “This device is to take the emphasis back to HTC and
provide them with a flagship phone that users can get excited about.”
If Facebook had been eager to build its own phone, it
could have reached out to close partner Microsoft, which owns a small
stake in the social network, Enderle reasoned.
A feature of Windows mobile software is integration with Facebook.
HTC is among the electronics companies that make
Windows-powered smartphones, increasing likelihood that a
Facebook-centric handset features a tie into the software titan’s Bing
Internet search engine.
A Facebook-focused phone’s goal would be to make it
intuitive to shop, search, post or do other tasks using the social
network’s services.
“You will see a phone laid out to address the many ways that you can get into Facebook,” Enderle said.
“A main page with a Facebook feel and your news feed
nicely displayed, and optimized to allow you to live in Facebook much
like you live in iTunes when you are on the iPhone.”
If reports are correct, the device will help Facebook
more easily connect with mobile users, and—importantly—deliver more ads
in the fast-growing segment.
The research firm eMarketer said US mobile advertising
spending grew 178% last year to $4.11 billion, a market that nearly
tripled last year.
Google took more than half of those revenues, but
Facebook’s share in growing: eMarketer said the social network accounted
for 9.5% of mobile ad revenues in 2012 and is expected to take 13.2%
this year.
In the mobile display market, however, Facebook is on top, projected to grab nearly $3 in $10 this year, the research firm said.
Paritosh Ranjan
PGDM 2sem
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