Facebook launches stripped down 'Facebook Lite' for developing countries
Over the last decade, Facebook's list of features and capabilities
has piled pretty high. Now the company is stripping that way in a new
app designed for customers with low-end phones and poor cellular
connections.
The new app, called Facebook Lite, weighs in at less than 1MB, about an eighth the size of Taylor Swift's hit song "Shake it Off." It also uses other tricks like downloading photos at lower quality to help ensure the app is as speedy as possible.
The app is part of Facebook's larger efforts to expand into the developing world. The company has been stepping up its operations in places like Africa, South America and Asia, using everything from the Internet.org initiative to flying drones that beam Internet access to remote areas of the planet, all with the aim to help people get online.
And with good reason: More than 1 billion people used Facebook from a mobile device at least once a month, the company said in April, up 24 percent from the same time last year. In addition, 73 percent of the company's revenue derived from advertising came from ads shown on a mobile device. By 2019, nearly 90 percent of all Facebook users will regularly access the service on a mobile device, according to estimates from eMarketer.
Facebook quietly launched the app in January, offering it in places like Bangladesh, Vietnam, Nigeria and Nepal. Now it's planning to make the app available to the wider world over the coming weeks.
It's free, just like Facebook's primary app, and only available for devices powered by Google's Android operating system. The company didn't respond to a request for comment about whether it will become available for other devices, like Apple's iPhone, as well.
The new app, called Facebook Lite, weighs in at less than 1MB, about an eighth the size of Taylor Swift's hit song "Shake it Off." It also uses other tricks like downloading photos at lower quality to help ensure the app is as speedy as possible.
The app is part of Facebook's larger efforts to expand into the developing world. The company has been stepping up its operations in places like Africa, South America and Asia, using everything from the Internet.org initiative to flying drones that beam Internet access to remote areas of the planet, all with the aim to help people get online.
And with good reason: More than 1 billion people used Facebook from a mobile device at least once a month, the company said in April, up 24 percent from the same time last year. In addition, 73 percent of the company's revenue derived from advertising came from ads shown on a mobile device. By 2019, nearly 90 percent of all Facebook users will regularly access the service on a mobile device, according to estimates from eMarketer.
Facebook quietly launched the app in January, offering it in places like Bangladesh, Vietnam, Nigeria and Nepal. Now it's planning to make the app available to the wider world over the coming weeks.
It's free, just like Facebook's primary app, and only available for devices powered by Google's Android operating system. The company didn't respond to a request for comment about whether it will become available for other devices, like Apple's iPhone, as well.
Facebook launches stripped down 'Facebook Lite' for developing countries
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