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Facebook has revamped its messaging system to make it the main way people communicate with friends and family.
Confounding rumours about what Facebook would announce, founder Mark Zuckerberg said the system was "not e-mail".
Instead, he said, it was modelled on instant messaging
systems and will route messages to people no matter how they are using
Facebook.
"It will handle messages across all the ways you want to communicate," said Mr Zuckerberg.
Fast friends
"This is not an e-mail killer," said Mr Zuckerberg. "It is a messaging system that includes e-mail as part of it."
Mr Zuckerberg said it would bring together four separate messaging types - SMS, Instant Messaging, e-mail and Facebook chat.
While those using it can attach their Facebook name to an
@facebook.com e-mail address this was not compulsory, said Mr
Zuckerberg.
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Mark Zuckerberg: ""We wanted to make it so that it's super simple"
At a special event called to unveil the
revamp, he said the re-design was triggered by the need to do something
to cope with the growing number of messages Facebook users were sending
every day.
To meet that need, he said, Facebook did not want to simply
create an e-mail system because research revealed that e-mail felt too
formal and slow for many people, particularly the young.
Instead, he said, people expected communication to fit
expectations set by their use of Instant Messaging, SMS and Facebook's
own chat system.
"We wanted to make this really simple and lightweight," he said.
Instead of forcing people to use separate systems, Facebook
messaging will work out the most appropriate way to get a message to a
person. It had a sophisticated "policy engine" that knew how Facebook
friends preferred to be contacted.
Mr Zuckerberg denied the revamped system was a "Gmail killer".
"If we do a good job, some people will say this is the way that the future will work," said Mr Zuckerberg.
He denied that it should be characterised as a "Gmail
killer". Instead, he said, it would synch with other products and let
messages flow to and fro.
"We want to enable to connect how they want to connect," said
Andrew Bosworth, lead engineer on the revamp, "People should be allowed
to share however they want to share."
Mr Bosworth said the revamp was the biggest project the
company had worked on to date and involved 15 engineers working for more
than 15 months.
The product will roll out slowly over the next few months with invites sent out to users to get them trying it