State Of The Web #02
Posted by Lauren and Dan, February 13 2012 at 17:01Forced to use Facebook Timeline

Some of you may know about the Facebook timeline, some of you may not, but in the next few weeks you won’t have a choice. The timeline update is one of the largest changes Facebook have pushed to us and soon it will be unleashed to 750 million people around the planet. The timeline will effectively replace the iconic Facebook Profile and will turn your life into a megascrapbook by visually displaying your Facebook archive of content. It has been in beta for a little while now for the select group of people who wanted it however there are a few haters of the new features (as with every other update Facebook bring along) and this is why.
The new timeline continues to display a chronological stream of your activity however now it will regurgitate everything from your past. As you scroll down the page you’ll see notable status updates, wall posts, shared content, photo albums and tagged photos, all there unmissable to anyone who wants to see. Holiday snaps, wedding day photos, house parties, university graduation, your 21st birthday, your first girlfriend, alot of things you personally might not want to be reminded of let alone your entire network.
The update however should be less catastrophic for people due to the staggered rollout and the fact that you will get a 7-day count down until the old profile layout is no longer an option. Protests will no doubt spike when the day comes you are required to use the new Timeline, however the recent launch of 60 Timeline apps will support the changeover and we think people will get to grips with the update sooner rather than later.
Google pulls more services
In a recent blog post Google announced their focus would shift to ‘building amazing products that millions of people love to use everyday” which means diverting their attention from products and services that “haven’t achieved the promise they had hoped for”. Services such as Google Message Continuity (GMS) email disaster recovery product will be closed and Google Sky Map will be open sourced.
Google’s vice president of product management, Dave Girouard, stated in the blog post that some products and services were not “experiencing the kind of adoption we’d like”. Some other products being abandoned this year are Social Graph API a developer tool to utilise public connections, Needlebase data management platform that may potentially be integrated into another platform, Urchin the online web analytics product and Picnik the online photo editor which its premium members will receive a full refund in the coming weeks.
Google regularly deprecates many of its projects when user adoption is poor or the products do not integrate properly into the overall Google experience therefore this recent update is no surprise and we can expect more of this over the year.
State of the web highlights
Breaking down Google’s 2011 revenue – Earlier in the month Google announced their 2011 earnings and jumping on this data Wordstream has conducted an analysis of these earnings and produced an infographic displaying the 10 top industries that spent the most money with Google and the common keywords that these advertisers pay for. Check it out.
The future of digital displays – Touchscreen is here to stay but with ever-evolving digital displays who knows where the future will take us. Corning a world leading high-tech glass manufacturer have produced a video to tell the “story of how highly engineered glass, with companion technologies, will help shape our world. Watch it here.

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