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  3. Facebook - a shining example of how to make software?

Facebook - a shining example of how to make software?

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  • P peterchen

    In my understanding, it's the same why answering machines are better than phone calls, and emails are better than answering machines: You don't have to reply See, if Aunt Josepha posts "My cat died", or "Firetrucked Uncle Joe tonight, very pneumatic", you don't have to reply immediately, and often, not at all.

    FILETIME to time_t
    | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

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    NormDroid
    wrote on last edited by
    #36

    Personal Information sold - deal done.

    Software Kinetics - The home of good software

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    • K keyboard warrior

      John C wrote:

      Aside from that it's strictly amateur.

      i think that is taking things a bit far. facebook may not be the "perfect" anything. but what it is, is successful. and long time coming. - the site has changed immensly since 2005 and user growth continued to climb despite the alleged "changes outrage" - facebook is the largest website in the world and doesn't have the reputation of a fail whale like twitter.com There is obviously some talent there.

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      NormDroid
      wrote on last edited by
      #37

      Living in cloud cuckoo land my friend. Who pays for Offices Staff Datacnters You do they sell your life to other companies - fucking simple if you actually thing about it. It's a bigger scam than the nigerian boys, except everyone across the world fell for it.

      Software Kinetics - The home of good software

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      • M Maximilien

        We must be Wednesday, people are bitching and moaning about Facebook. :rolleyes:

        Watched code never compiles.

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        NormDroid
        wrote on last edited by
        #38

        No revealing FB to actually what it is.

        Software Kinetics - The home of good software

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        • J Jim Crafton

          digital man wrote:

          I have recently started using FB as it is a convenient way of staying in touch with friends and family abroad.

          I hear this from people all the time. What exactly is so complex about sending an email? Or, gasp, having calling someone up on the phone? Most peoples mobile plans give them so many minutes I would expect this would be trivial (unless it's international calls). I don't see what FB gives you that email doesn't, and email doesn't broadcast your personal info to any idiot with an IP connection.

          ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Personal 3D projects Just Say No to Web 2 Point Blow

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          R Giskard Reventlov
          wrote on last edited by
          #39

          It's internationalso FB does mean I can easily chat with them cos I can see they're online. Has proved very good. I speak to more of my friends more often than I used to and it seems to negate the time diff which is between 5 and 8 hours.

          "If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair. nils illegitimus carborundum me, me, me

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          • R realJSOP

            +1. The *intent* behind facebook isn't to allow you to communicate with friends/family. It's intent is to make money by selling your contact info (and your"friends" contact info) to advertisers. Magnanimous they are not. My wife and I don't have facebook accounts.

            ".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010
            -----
            You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010
            -----
            "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997

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            R Giskard Reventlov
            wrote on last edited by
            #40

            Other than my email address Facebook knows almost nothing about me - you don't have to disclose very much. In any case it's not that hard for a detremined person to find out whatever they want about you. Whereas you and I might value our privay young people see it as an irrelevance and a roadblock.

            "If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair. nils illegitimus carborundum me, me, me

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            • J Jim Crafton

              But that's his point. Are you willing going to hand over all this information, for basically nothing? For a service that nominally doesn't do any more than an email would? Unless I had no choice at all, I sure wouldn't. It just seems creepy.

              ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Personal 3D projects Just Say No to Web 2 Point Blow

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              keyboard warrior
              wrote on last edited by
              #41

              Jim Crafton wrote:

              But that's his point.

              totally, my thoughts as well.

              Jim Crafton wrote:

              Are you willing going to hand over all this information, for basically nothing? For a service that nominally doesn't do any more than an email would?

              it is not a question of whether i am or am not. 500 million are.

              modified on Wednesday, January 19, 2011 3:28 PM

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              • J Jim Crafton

                jgasm wrote:

                yet microsoft found this to be a solid investment to the tune of millions.

                Get rid of the "solid" bit. Lot's of people do dumb things every single day. Just because Microsoft invests in them doesn't automatically mean that it's actually a good investment. Go back and look at the history of the tech bubble, and the web 2.0 bubble - it's riddled with a whole range of completely idiotic companies that venture capitalist threw *billions* of dollars at, that the tech media grossly over hyped, if not flat out lied about, that industry analysts *did* in fact lie about in order to increase the IPO potential. And if you don't buy that, then if your neighbor, who made 20K a year, walked up to you for a 500K loan with no money down or any collateral whatsoever, would you give it to him? Of course not! And yet...

                ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Personal 3D projects Just Say No to Web 2 Point Blow

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                keyboard warrior
                wrote on last edited by
                #42

                well only the future will tell. i am not saying it is a perfect enviro or that the golden blessing of microsoft is the end all be all. we may not understand the exact magic formula that makes people love this website, but this is a successful service with many many employees and strong influence.

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                • N NormDroid

                  No revealing FB to actually what it is.

                  Software Kinetics - The home of good software

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                  keyboard warrior
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #43

                  Norm .net wrote:

                  revealing FB to actually what it is.

                  a snake in the grass! ~~~~~~~~~~o:

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                  • N NormDroid

                    Personal Information sold - deal done.

                    Software Kinetics - The home of good software

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                    keyboard warrior
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #44

                    it is not personal when you put it online to a semi-public profile. do not post to facebook that which you do not want known.

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                    • N NormDroid

                      Living in cloud cuckoo land my friend. Who pays for Offices Staff Datacnters You do they sell your life to other companies - fucking simple if you actually thing about it. It's a bigger scam than the nigerian boys, except everyone across the world fell for it.

                      Software Kinetics - The home of good software

                      K Offline
                      K Offline
                      keyboard warrior
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #45

                      Norm .net wrote:

                      Living in cloud cuckoo land my friend.Who pays forOfficesStaffDatacntersYou do they sell your life to other companies - f***ing simple if you actually thing about it.

                      the millions upon millions of orgs that have invested. US department of defense. the american tax payers. microsoft.

                      Norm .net wrote:

                      f***ing simple if you actually thing about it.

                      . But if reports of the company’s revenue being $2 billion last year are correct, investors are paying 25 times revenue, well above the seven times revenue Google trades for, says Ira Cohen, managing director for investment banking firm Signal Hill.

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                      • K keyboard warrior

                        Jim Crafton wrote:

                        But that's his point.

                        totally, my thoughts as well.

                        Jim Crafton wrote:

                        Are you willing going to hand over all this information, for basically nothing? For a service that nominally doesn't do any more than an email would?

                        it is not a question of whether i am or am not. 500 million are.

                        modified on Wednesday, January 19, 2011 3:28 PM

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                        Roger Wright
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #46

                        jgasm wrote:

                        500 million are.

                        I bet those are the same 500 million who buy things they read about in spam, too. :-D

                        Will Rogers never met me.

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                        • M Member 96

                          I read with interest an article linked from the CodeProject Insider regarding how Facebook ships code: "I hope that releasing these notes will help shed some light on how Facebook has managed to push decision-making “down” in its organization without descending into chaos… It’s hard to argue with Facebook’s results or the coherence of Facebook’s product offerings. I think and hope that many consumer internet companies can learn from Facebook’s example." This is not unique, there are a number of articles holding up aspects of facebook as an example for software developers. But an example of what? Facebook is a perfect example of really crappy software. I use it regularly, it's pure crap from every aspect, there is very little thought put into usability, half the time core features don't work properly or at all (multi photo uploading). You can't even load a photo from another website so if you have a flickr photo you have to save to your hard drive and upload. Basic stuff that other "social" sites get from day one. Every operation is counter-intuitive and hard to find. They regularly have epic privacy leaks. There's no end to how bad it is. Any one of us experienced developers here could excrete an equally unusable interface given free time and a few months. There are only two unique things about Facebook as software that are even remotely interesting: 1) The sheer scale of it's user base 2) It's prominence in popular culture. Telerik made a sample UI replacement for Facebook called F!aceDeck[^] out of Silverlight in a month or so as a proof of concept for a Microsoft dev conference. It's slick, clean and easily far better than Facebooks web interface. A month! Facebook has succeeded in spite of their developers shooting themselves in the foot on a regular basis because they are a classic example of the confluence of right place / right time and the most important ingredient of all in any commercial software's success: marketing. For people to be holding it up as an example to other developers and code shops is ludicrous. The only benefit and it's probably not a significant one these days is how they support their huge customer base. Aside from that it's strictly amateur.


                          There is no failure only feedback

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                          Andy Brummer
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #47

                          I don't want to sound like a Facebook fanboy or supporter, but I've worked on a number of large websites, and they are ridiculously tiny compared to the beast that is facebook. As "crappy" as their interface is, millions of people are constantly banging on that thing day in and day out and it is as fast as google if not faster. Personally, I think that is the number one reason they crushed MySpace. Casandra and the improvements they made to memcached are first rate. A schema-less database that scales to no end and handles auto-replication while under crazy load is nothing short of amazing. Unlike mySpace that decided that they needed to work on "customer" wants like letting them customize their pages any way they wanted while relying on traditional databases, they realized that scaling, responsiveness, and games where what people really wanted, and those were the problems they solved. Facebook is simple and easy to use. I know tons of people that can barely use a PC, but feel right at home with facebook on the web and mobile. I'm sure many advanced features are constrained by scale, and or fall into the 80/20 category. It almost never fails uploading a pic at a time from my blackberry, but yeah, their multiple photo upload sucks. I think the worst thing about facebook is that they are actively working to sell out their users. The crap they pull goes way beyond just trying to get money from ads and the like. They are pushing every privacy boundary just to see what they can get away with, even if it doesn't even seem like they could make money from it. The other thing is that facebook is a huge platform for all those social games that I hate so much. They do a really good job at it, and it brings people in so they can live out all their mafia/farmer fantasies. They also make it easy to ignore for people like me.

                          Curvature of the Mind

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                          • J Jim Crafton

                            I fail to see how any of those things are actually better than email. You can certainly easily post a message to as many people as you'd like with email.

                            aspdotnetdev wrote:

                            an you imagine how annoying it would be if your Facebook friends sent you an email every time they updated their status and posted a picture?

                            Yes, so the normal thing to do, the thing that would actually *increase* communication, would be to email your friend, or gasp, *phone* them, and ask them how things are going!

                            aspdotnetdev wrote:

                            On the plus side, it's less work for you and you get to feel connected anytime you want.

                            That's just it - you get to *feel* more connected, but more than likely you're not. I *feel* like I can fly off the top of the Empire State building every time I hear the theme to Superman, but I know for fact that wouldn't actually work. I remember *feeling* at peace with the Universe when I tried smoking pot back in college, but if memory serves it didn't last long once the miracle of THC wore off! So FB is basically dumbing things down, and making you *feel* like you're accomplishing things, when in fact it's all just a bunch of hand waving and smoke and mirrors.

                            ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Personal 3D projects Just Say No to Web 2 Point Blow

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                            Andy Brummer
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #48

                            It's different like the lounge. Why have you come here day after day for the past almost 10 years, when you could have been emailing everyone for the same time. :-D What does the lounge provide that email doesn't?

                            Curvature of the Mind

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • A Andy Brummer

                              I don't want to sound like a Facebook fanboy or supporter, but I've worked on a number of large websites, and they are ridiculously tiny compared to the beast that is facebook. As "crappy" as their interface is, millions of people are constantly banging on that thing day in and day out and it is as fast as google if not faster. Personally, I think that is the number one reason they crushed MySpace. Casandra and the improvements they made to memcached are first rate. A schema-less database that scales to no end and handles auto-replication while under crazy load is nothing short of amazing. Unlike mySpace that decided that they needed to work on "customer" wants like letting them customize their pages any way they wanted while relying on traditional databases, they realized that scaling, responsiveness, and games where what people really wanted, and those were the problems they solved. Facebook is simple and easy to use. I know tons of people that can barely use a PC, but feel right at home with facebook on the web and mobile. I'm sure many advanced features are constrained by scale, and or fall into the 80/20 category. It almost never fails uploading a pic at a time from my blackberry, but yeah, their multiple photo upload sucks. I think the worst thing about facebook is that they are actively working to sell out their users. The crap they pull goes way beyond just trying to get money from ads and the like. They are pushing every privacy boundary just to see what they can get away with, even if it doesn't even seem like they could make money from it. The other thing is that facebook is a huge platform for all those social games that I hate so much. They do a really good job at it, and it brings people in so they can live out all their mafia/farmer fantasies. They also make it easy to ignore for people like me.

                              Curvature of the Mind

                              R Offline
                              R Offline
                              RyanEK
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #49

                              I totally agree with you. I don't understand all the Facebook hate. "Why not just pick up a phone?". I'm sure old fogeys were saying that years ago when email was gaining popularity.

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                              • R RyanEK

                                I totally agree with you. I don't understand all the Facebook hate. "Why not just pick up a phone?". I'm sure old fogeys were saying that years ago when email was gaining popularity.

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                                T Offline
                                TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #50

                                RyanEK wrote:

                                Facebook hate

                                sour grapes

                                "If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • A Andy Brummer

                                  I don't want to sound like a Facebook fanboy or supporter, but I've worked on a number of large websites, and they are ridiculously tiny compared to the beast that is facebook. As "crappy" as their interface is, millions of people are constantly banging on that thing day in and day out and it is as fast as google if not faster. Personally, I think that is the number one reason they crushed MySpace. Casandra and the improvements they made to memcached are first rate. A schema-less database that scales to no end and handles auto-replication while under crazy load is nothing short of amazing. Unlike mySpace that decided that they needed to work on "customer" wants like letting them customize their pages any way they wanted while relying on traditional databases, they realized that scaling, responsiveness, and games where what people really wanted, and those were the problems they solved. Facebook is simple and easy to use. I know tons of people that can barely use a PC, but feel right at home with facebook on the web and mobile. I'm sure many advanced features are constrained by scale, and or fall into the 80/20 category. It almost never fails uploading a pic at a time from my blackberry, but yeah, their multiple photo upload sucks. I think the worst thing about facebook is that they are actively working to sell out their users. The crap they pull goes way beyond just trying to get money from ads and the like. They are pushing every privacy boundary just to see what they can get away with, even if it doesn't even seem like they could make money from it. The other thing is that facebook is a huge platform for all those social games that I hate so much. They do a really good job at it, and it brings people in so they can live out all their mafia/farmer fantasies. They also make it easy to ignore for people like me.

                                  Curvature of the Mind

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                                  Member 96
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #51

                                  As an app it's poorly designed, un-intuitive and that has nothing to do with it's size or scope. Yes it's a technical feat that they service so many users that they do, on the other hand it's really not considering that with the modern tools at hand any one of us could write a better replacement for it that would be just as responsive. To call it *huge* is only accurate in the sense of how many users they must support. Take that out and it's a pretty standard simple web application. The only reason people find it easy to use is through the sheer simplicity of what it has to accomplish. It's so limited in features that it's be definition that much easier to use. Go into *any* feature beyond posting an update or reading other peoples updates and you quickly find out how unintuitive and just plain buggy it is. At it's heart it's a simple bulletin board system, the kind that have been around and which I've been using since the days of dial up BBS's. Perhaps to some of the more youthful in our crowd it seems ground breaking but let's face it, in the fullness of time from the right perspective it's only real lesson to teach us is the importance of being in the right place at the right time and having a firm understanding of marketing.


                                  There is no failure only feedback

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                                  • R RyanEK

                                    I totally agree with you. I don't understand all the Facebook hate. "Why not just pick up a phone?". I'm sure old fogeys were saying that years ago when email was gaining popularity.

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Member 96
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #52

                                    Interesting choice to publish your opinion without reading *any* of the discussion that went before and basing it solely on as light a grasp of the topic at hand as humanly possible. :)


                                    There is no failure only feedback

                                    R 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • M Member 96

                                      Interesting choice to publish your opinion without reading *any* of the discussion that went before and basing it solely on as light a grasp of the topic at hand as humanly possible. :)


                                      There is no failure only feedback

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                                      R Offline
                                      RyanEK
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #53

                                      I'm not quite sure how you determined that I hadn't read any previous posts. It's quite obvious in this forum that any mention of Facebook will get a bashing.

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • M Member 96

                                        As an app it's poorly designed, un-intuitive and that has nothing to do with it's size or scope. Yes it's a technical feat that they service so many users that they do, on the other hand it's really not considering that with the modern tools at hand any one of us could write a better replacement for it that would be just as responsive. To call it *huge* is only accurate in the sense of how many users they must support. Take that out and it's a pretty standard simple web application. The only reason people find it easy to use is through the sheer simplicity of what it has to accomplish. It's so limited in features that it's be definition that much easier to use. Go into *any* feature beyond posting an update or reading other peoples updates and you quickly find out how unintuitive and just plain buggy it is. At it's heart it's a simple bulletin board system, the kind that have been around and which I've been using since the days of dial up BBS's. Perhaps to some of the more youthful in our crowd it seems ground breaking but let's face it, in the fullness of time from the right perspective it's only real lesson to teach us is the importance of being in the right place at the right time and having a firm understanding of marketing.


                                        There is no failure only feedback

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                                        Andy Brummer
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #54

                                        John C wrote:

                                        on the other hand it's really not considering that with the modern tools at hand any one of us could write a better replacement for it that would be just as responsive.

                                        I think you are really underestimating this one. There are many many more failures than successes in this category. Google is about the only other web app the size of facebook and they don't even handle live updates for their main app. They built their own custom file system, and computation engine to get there, which is pretty incredible engineering. I'm pretty sure the facebook platform is the only thing that could actually run the facebook application right now, and it can only be considered "off the shelf" because they open sourced their internal tools. If facebook is so easy to build? What would you build it on, and there isn't a relational database that could work as the back end for facebook.

                                        Curvature of the Mind

                                        K M 2 Replies Last reply
                                        0
                                        • M Member 96

                                          As an app it's poorly designed, un-intuitive and that has nothing to do with it's size or scope. Yes it's a technical feat that they service so many users that they do, on the other hand it's really not considering that with the modern tools at hand any one of us could write a better replacement for it that would be just as responsive. To call it *huge* is only accurate in the sense of how many users they must support. Take that out and it's a pretty standard simple web application. The only reason people find it easy to use is through the sheer simplicity of what it has to accomplish. It's so limited in features that it's be definition that much easier to use. Go into *any* feature beyond posting an update or reading other peoples updates and you quickly find out how unintuitive and just plain buggy it is. At it's heart it's a simple bulletin board system, the kind that have been around and which I've been using since the days of dial up BBS's. Perhaps to some of the more youthful in our crowd it seems ground breaking but let's face it, in the fullness of time from the right perspective it's only real lesson to teach us is the importance of being in the right place at the right time and having a firm understanding of marketing.


                                          There is no failure only feedback

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                                          R Offline
                                          RyanEK
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #55

                                          John C wrote:

                                          pretty standard simple web application

                                          John C wrote:

                                          the only reason people find it easy to use is through the sheer simplicity of what it has to accomplish

                                          I'm pretty sure that's what they were going for. I'm starting to get confused by your arguments?

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