Showing posts with label Facebook Hello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook Hello. Show all posts

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Hey, why not phone your dead loved ones with Facebook's new 'Hello' call dialer app

Facebook on Wednesday launched a new caller ID and phone call dialer app for Android. iPhone users, this isn't for you: iOS won't give up the needed phone permissions. And maybe that's a good thing.

Called "Hello," the app allows you to preview info on people or businesses who are calling you, to help you avoid telemarketers, bill collectors, and exes. Hello also integrates your Facebook friends' phone numbers with their profiles, and other cool stuff. “It also might tell you you've recently had phone calls with dead people,” writes Damon Beres at HuffPo.


When I downloaded the "Hello" app to my smartphone, I swiped over to my call history and was startled to find that my friend's younger brother Oliver was showing up instead of him -- even though he passed away two years ago.
Apparently, the problem has to do with how phone numbers can be set up on Facebook. After looking into the issue following an inquiry from The Huffington Post, a spokeswoman for Facebook told me that my friend's number was registered under Oliver's account, though it's not viewable by his friends. In other words, Oliver had two numbers associated with his account: His own cell phone number that was posted on his Facebook profile for others to see, and, for reasons that aren't clear, my friend's cell phone number that was kept private but associated with his account.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

SAY "HELLO" TO THE FACEBOOK PHONE (AGAIN)

Mark Zuckerberg's last attempt to overtake your smartphone may have flopped, but that isn't stopping him from giving it another try. Two years after the ill-fated Facebook Home project was first announced, the company is unveiling another phone-focused initiative today. Say hello to Facebook Hello.

As previously rumored, Facebook Hello is a blue-skinned replacement for the native phone dialer on Android. With it, users can mine Facebook's social graph for contacts and caller ID details, make calls over Wi-Fi, and easily move their conversations to the Facebook Messenger app, if desired. The app also supports call blocking, and even lets you know how many others have blocked the number.

With Hello, Facebook is taking a much quieter, less ambitious approach to creating what had for years been rumored as the inevitable "Facebook phone." Instead of building its handsets or even an operating system of its own, the company's foray into your pocket has focused more on individual apps. Facebook Home, which failed to win over many users, looked like something halfway between an OS and an app—essentially, a Facebook-branded skin for Android devices. When that didn't fly, Facebook switched to a much more subtle approach: infiltrating your phone by releasing one standalone app at a time, and even providing development and advertising tools for other app developers.


You can download facebook hello from PlayStore here.