This Article originally Posted on venturebeat.com
With Facebook’s recent unveiling of a camera app for the iPhone, as well as a universal app store,
it’s becoming clearer to me that even if the company is planning a
phone of its own, it likely won’t be as big a deal as we think.
Instead, Facebook is continually proving that every phone is a
Facebook phone — or at least, every phone that can run Facebook’s apps,
which includes the iPhone, Android devices, and Windows Phones. That
seems a far better strategy for the company too, as Facebook likely
won’t have a chance in hell to pry consumers away from their existing
smartphone platforms.
A rising popularity in Facebook mobile consumption led the company to
list mobile as a major risk before it went public. The average Facebook
user spent 441 minutes (7 hours and 21 minutes) accessing the site on
mobile, the company revealed in its updated S-1 filing earlier this month.
A Facebook phone likely won’t make a dent against all those users
already using Facebook on their phones — and I don’t think that’s what
the company wants anyway. Facebook wouldn’t spend $1 billion on Instagram, the wildly popular photo-sharing app on the iPhone and Android, if it aimed to actually kill other mobile platforms.
Now I won’t deny that a Facebook phone will happen at some point.
We’ve been hearing about such a device for some time — most recently, it’s gone by the codename “Buffy”
and is said to be developed by HTC — and it makes sense for Facebook to
want a device entirely its own. But if anything, it’ll likely be a
cheap mid-range Android phone that will appeal to teenagers and emerging
markets, and not something that will compete with high-end smartphones.
(I’d imagine it would be similar to Inq’s Facebook-focused phones, though that company ended up cancelling one of its upcoming models.)
Much like how Amazon offered a completely different spin on Android
with the Kindle Fire, Facebook’s phone would be a cheap and easy way for
its users to climb aboard mobile. (And the fact that it will lock those
users into Facebook’s ecosystem is a nice plus.)
Business Insider’s Jay Yarow points out
that with all of its recent apps, it looks like Facebook is putting
together all of the core components of its phone right in front of us.
The Facebook Camera app could easily be the primary camera app on the
Facebook phone, and Facebook Messages could serve as main messaging app
as well (just like iMessages, Facebook could use the app to handle both
SMS and its own messages). Of course, those apps also serve as a perfect
way to distract users from built-in apps on their smartphones.
Yarow also points to Facebook’s rumored interest in purchasing Opera,
which would give it a powerful web browser of its own. While that’s one
possibility, I view Facebook’s interest in Opera in another way: It’s
the perfect way for Facebook to steal consumers away from mobile Safari
on the iPhone and Android’s browsers (which includes the original
Android browser and Chrome for Android).
If you own the browser, you own the web.
Opera could also serve as the perfect engine for a hyper-social web
browser that’s intimately connected with all of Facebook’s services.
It’s also a particularly interesting on the iPhone, as it’s the only
third-party browser that isn’t forced to use Apple’s WebKit framework.
Opera compresses web content on its servers before pushing it to your
device, so it bypasses Apple’s restrictions on third-party browsers.
That makes Opera on the iPhone faster than mobile Safari as well, and it
could allow Facebook to build a truly interesting browser of its own
with Opera’s tech.
Why Facebook doesn’t need a Facebook Phone (but will try anyway) - Posted on venturebeat.com
Denizer Carter
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