Thursday, November 18, 2010

Camera takes photos around corner

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Ramesh Raskar explains how the camera can shoot around corners

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A camera that can shoot around corners has been developed by US scientists.

The prototype uses an ultra-short high-intensity burst of laser light to illuminate a scene.

The device constructs a basic image of its surroundings - including objects hidden around the corner - by collecting the tiny amounts of light that bounce around the scene.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology team believe it has uses in search and rescue and robot vision.

"It's like having x-ray vision without the x-rays," said Professor Ramesh Raskar, head of the Camera Culture group at the MIT Media Lab and one of the team behind the system.

"But we're going around the problem rather than going through it."

Professor Shree Nayar of Columbia University, an expert in light scattering and computer vision, was very complimentary about the work and said it was a new and "very interesting research direction".

"What is not entirely clear is what complexities of invisible scenes are computable at this point," he told BBC News.

"They have not yet shown recovery of an entire [real-world] scene, for instance."

Flash trick

Professor Raskar said that when he started research on the camera three years ago, senior people told him it was "impossible".

However, working with several students, the idea is becoming a reality.

The heart of the room-sized camera is a femtosecond laser, a high-intensity light source which can fire ultra-short bursts of laser light that last just one quadrillionth of a second (that's 0.000000000000001 seconds).

The light sources are more commonly used by chemists to image reactions at the atomic or molecular scale.

For the femtosecond transient imaging system, as the camera is known, the laser is used to fire a pulse of light onto a scene.

The light particles scatter and reflect off all surfaces including the walls and the floor.

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If there is a corner, some of the light will be reflected around it. It will then continue to bounce around the scene, reflecting off objects - or people - hidden around the bend.

Some of these particles will again be reflected back around the corner to the camera's sensor.

Here, the work is all about timing.

Following the initial pulse of laser light, its shutter remains closed to stop the precise sensors being overwhelmed with the first high-intensity reflections.

"Start Quote

You could generate a map before you go into a dangerous place like a building fire, or a robotic car could use the system to compute the path it should take around a corner before it takes it"

End Quote Prof Ramesh Raskar

This method - known as "time-gating" - is commonly used by cameras in military surveillance aircraft to peer through dense foliage.

In these systems, the shutter remains closed until after the first reflections off the tops of the trees. It then opens to collect resections of hidden vehicles or machinery beneath the canopy.

Similarly, the experimental camera shutter opens once the first reflected light has passed, allowing it to mop up the ever-decreasing amounts of reflected light - or "echoes" as Prof Raskar calls them - from the scene.

Unlike a standard camera that just measures the intensity and position of the light particles as it hits the sensor, the experimental set up also measures the arrival time of the particles at each pixel.

This is the central idea used in so-called "time-of-flight cameras" or Lidar (Light Detection And Ranging) that can map objects in the "line of sight" of the camera.

Lidar is commonly used in military applications and has been put to use by Google's Street View cars to create 3D models of buildings.

Professor Raskar calls his set-up a "time-of-flight camera on steroids".

Both use the speed of light and the arrival time of each particle to calculate the so-called "path length" - or distance travelled - of the light.

To build a picture of a scene, the experimental set up must repeat the process of firing the laser and collecting the reflections several times. Each pulse is done at a slightly different point and takes just billionths of a second to complete.

"We need to do it at least a dozen times," said Professor Raskar. "But the more the better."

It then use complex algorithms - similar to those used in medical CAT scans - to construct a probable 3D model of the surrounding area - including objects that may be hidden around the corner.

"In the same way that a CAT scan can reveal what is inside the body by taking multiple photographs using an x-ray source in different positions, we can recover what is beyond the line of sight by shining the laser at different points on a reflective surface," he said.

Look ahead

At the moment, the set-up only works in controlled laboratory conditions and can get confused by complex scenes.

"It looks like they are very far from handling regular scenes," said Prof Nayar.

In everyday situations, he said, the system may compute "multiple solutions" for an image, largely because it relied on such small amounts of light and it was therefore difficult to extrapolate the exact path of the particle as it bounced around a room.

"However, it's a very interesting first step," he said.

It would now be interesting to see how far the idea could be pushed, he added.

Professor Raskar said there are "lots of interesting things you can do with it.

"You could generate a map before you go into a dangerous place like a building fire, or a robotic car could use the system to compute the path it should take around a corner before it takes it."

However, he said, the team initially aim to use the system to build an advanced endoscope.

"It's an easy application to target," he said. "It's a nice, dark environment."

If the team get good results from their trials, he said, they could have a working endoscope prototype within two years.

"That would be something that is room-sized," he said. "Building something portable could take longer."

Additional reporting in video by Matthew Danzico.



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MySpace cozies up to Facebook

The once dominant MySpace has turned to the company that stole its crown, Facebook for help to drive users to its ailing site.

The two launched Mashup with Facebook, to let MySpace users log into their Facebook accounts through their MySpace page.

This means users can port over their likes and interests listed on Facebook.

In turn users will get a stream of entertainment content based on these preferences.

"We feel this is a complimentary service to Facebook," said Mike Jones, MySpace chief executive officer.

"This new feature is a great illustration of our strategy around social entertainment and enabling the real-time stream."

MySpace is among more than a million websites letting Facebook members extend their social graph on the world's biggest social network to other parts of the web.

Facebook's vice president of partnerships Dan Rose said the sharing of information is a strategy that "makes a lot of sense."

"Sharing entertainment and music interests is part of many of our friendships, online and off.

"MySpace is giving people an easy way to bring their favourite bands, celebrities and movies from Facebook to create a personalised experience on MySpace from the start," added Mr Rose.

Wins and loses

Is this partnership an illustration that MySpace has conceded supremacy to Facebook?

Industry analyst Augie Ray of Forrester Research told BBC News there were gains for both companies with this deal.

"People have come to think of MySpace in a certain way and while I don't think this deal will help them attract a lot of users it is necessary that those people on the site enjoy the MySpace experience and I think this helps.

"This is also a good opportunity for Facebook to demonstrate that the information you have about yourself and about your friends belongs to you. In many respects this is about Facebook changing attitudes over ownership of data than anything else."

Adam Ostrow of social media news site Mashable.com said he believed the arrangement underlines who rules this world.

"It's official acknowledgement on the part of MySpace that Facebook has indeed become top dog in the social networking space, and its better to be with them than against them at this point."

MySpace which is owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp has an estimated 130 million users while Facebook has over 500 million.

Facebook's demise ?

And what of Facebook's future?

According to one internet expert, the world's biggest social network only has five years left before it starts to see users drift off the way they did with MySpace and other social site Bebo.

At a marketing conference in Sydney, Australia this week, Dr Jeffrey Cole claimed that Facebook will not fare any better at holding onto its audience than these sites have in recent years. Appearing at the same Ninemsn Digital Marketing Summit four years earlier, Dr Cole predicted the demise of MySpace.

"The same thing will happen to Facebook but it's going to take a lot longer," said Dr Cole a director of the World Internet project which tracks how the internet affects media consumption.

"And it's not going to be replaced by one big social networking community but it's going to fragment."



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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Date set for 4G airwaves auction

Ofcom's chief exeuctive Ed Richards has laid out the timetable which will pave the way for next-generation mobile services in the UK.

The airwaves that will enable 4G networks will be auctioned off in the first half of 2012, Mr Richards said.

It means the spectrum will become available from 2013.

The auction was originally earmarked for 2009 but was delayed because of legal action by mobile firms.

Mr Richards announced the timetable at the FT World Telecoms Conference.

Level playing field

He warned that "further litigation against the government or regulator will jeopardise this timetable".

Mobile operators have been arguing over the distribution of existing spectrum.

Ofcom had originally planned to redistribute spectrum allocated to O2 and Vodafone, prompting the two operators to launch legal action against the regulator.

Historically the 900MHz slice of spectrum has belonged exclusively to O2 and Vodafone because they were the only two mobile operators on the market when it was handed out.

Ofcom dropped its plans to share out its spectrum, following the merger between T-Mobile and Orange.

"In the light of the merger, there was not such an unlevel playing field," said Ovum analyst Matthew Howett.

It prompted Vodafone and O2 to drop their legal action, paving the way for the auctions to go ahead.

"There is still the threat of legal action but operators are more interested in getting this over and done with," said Mr Howett.

More capacity

The auction will see two chunks of the spectrum - the 800MHz and 2.6GHz bands - sold off.

Both have great value to operators.

The 800MHz slice - which has been freed up by the switchover to digital TV - allows mobile signals to travel over greater distances, making it invaluable in the search to find ways of bringing broadband to rural areas.

The higher capacity 2.6GHz band will be more useful in towns and cities where lots of users require services.

The delay in the sale of spectrum means that the UK will be behind other countries in offering services. Germany has already auctioned off its digital dividend spectrum and others are planning to do so soon.

For consumers 4G or LTE (Long Term Evolution) services will mean more capacity on the networks.

"They will have a more enjoyable experince using mobile broadband," said Mr Howett.

The popularity of smartphones has meant an explosion in demand for mobile data.

It could mean even next-generation networks run out of capAcity, thinks Stephen Rayment, chief technology officer of BelAir Networks.

"Mobile data traffic is already on track to exceed the capacity that will be available in forthcoming LTE and 4G networks. Consequently, buying new spectrum is no longer a speculative move for mobile operators, it's an absolute necessity," he said.

Despite the demand for new networks, Mr Howett predicts the spectrum will sell for a lot less than its 3G equivalent which raised �22bn for the Treasury when it was sold in 2000.



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Minister backs &#39;two-speed&#39; net

Culture minister Ed Vaizey has backed a "two-speed" internet, letting service providers charge content makers and customers for "fast lane" access.

It paves the way for an end to "net neutrality" - with heavy bandwidth users like Google and the BBC likely to face a bill for the pipes they use.

Mr Vaizey said ISPs must be free to experiment with new charges to help pay for the expansion in internet services.

But critics warn the move could harm free speech and stifle innovation.

'Fast lane'

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are supposed to treat all web traffic equally - serving only as a one-size-fits-all pipe for whatever data is passing from content providers to end users.

But a debate has been raging around the world over how much they should be allowed to control the size of their pipes, and thus the internet speed that users get from the site.

In the US, President Barack Obama has backed net neutrality - treating all traffic equally - and regulators have threatened possible legal action against ISPs that block or restrict access to sites.

"Start Quote

In order for the internet to continue as the open, innovative force for good that it has been over the past 20 years it is essential that all elements continue to prosper"

End Quote Ed Vaizey Culture minister

But some traffic management, where traffic from one source is favoured over another, is likely to be allowed, with a ruling due next year, Mr Vaizey suggests.

The EU has also backed traffic management but with greater transparency to ensure the internet remains "open" - something that will soon be enshrined in UK law.

Mr Vaizey argues that most ISPs already carried out traffic management "to ensure the smooth running of their networks" without any impact on competition or consumer rights.

In his speech, he argues that the continued quality of internet services in the UK is under threat due to the rapid expansion of mobile and wireless networks and the "massive investment" it needed.

As a result, ISPs had to be free to experiment with new ways of raising revenue - provided customers were clear about what they were buying.

He says: "We have got to continue to encourage the market to innovate and experiment with different business models and ways of providing consumers with what they want.

"This could include the evolution of a two-sided market where consumers and content providers could choose to pay for differing levels of quality of service."

He also suggests that content makers could be charged for the first time for the use of the ISP's networks - provided they too were clear about what they were getting.

"Content and application providers should be able to know exactly what level of service they are getting especially if they are paying for it," he says.

'Appalling'

He added that the government did not want to introduce new laws on top of those already being adopted from the EU to guarantee an "open" internet, arguing that light touch regulation was better.

He also argued that, that unlike in the US where some areas only had the choice of one service provider, there was enough rivalry between providers to ensure consumers' rights were protected.

"The essential competition we enjoy in Europe and especially in the UK, will be an essential safeguard against unfair discrimination," he argues.

He said ISPs must also guarantee that net users can continue to access any legal website or content.

"In order for the internet to continue as the open, innovative force for good that it has been over the past 20 years it is essential that all elements continue to prosper.

"This means ensuring that content providers and applications have open access to consumers and vice versa.

"But it also means allowing ISPs and networks to innovate and experiment with new ways of delivering what consumers want so we can ensure continued investment in the infrastructure that delivers the content and applications we all use."

But Jim Killock, of net freedom campaigners the Open Rights Group, said the proposals could have "appalling" consequences for free speech and commercial innovation.

"Ed Vaizey is wrong to assume that there is no problem if BT or Virgin restrict people's internet access for their commercial advantage. Removing 'net neutrality' will reduce innovation and reduce people's ability to exercise their freedom of speech.

"This is why ORG will campaign against any market abuse, should Ed Vaizey allow it to happen."



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Gran Turismo 5 gets release date

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After years in development and millions of pounds spent on it, Gran Turismo 5 has finally been given a release date.

Developers Polyphony Digital, a subsidiary of Sony Computer Entertainment, says the game will hit shelves in the UK and around the world on Wednesday 24 November.

Fans will be able to choose from dozens of circuits, including the Top Gear test track.

More than 1,000 cars also feature in the game for the PlayStation 3.

Among them are the Lamborghini Murciélago LP 670-4 SuperVeloce, the Lexus LFA and the McLaren MP4-12C.

Gran Turismo is the world's most popular video racing game series.

So far it's sold more than 56 million units but this latest edition has suffered serious delays.

'Technological leap'

It was originally scheduled for release last year but that got put back to 2010.

I can only apologize to everyone for making you wait so long, and I hope that when you try out the wealth of driving experiences available in Gran Turismo 5, you will not be disappointed

Kazunori Yamauchi President of Polyphony Digital

Since then it's been delayed again twice.

Kazunori Yamauchi, president of Polyphony Digital said: "With the technological leap on to PlayStation 3, our objective with Gran Turismo 5 was to create another great revolution which would not only satisfy our own high expectations, but would meet or even exceed the anticipation of the fans.

"Satisfying the loyal Gran Turismo followers is at the heart of all of our efforts, which is why it was such a difficult decision to delay the release of the game, and one which we did not take lightly.

"I can only apologize to everyone for making you wait so long, and I hope that when you try out the wealth of driving experiences available in Gran Turismo 5, you will not be disappointed."

As with increasing numbers of video games GT5 will also be released in 3D.



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China in US web traffic hijacking

The traffic to some highly sensitive US websites was briefly rerouted via China, according to Reuters.

The incident, which happened for 18 minutes last April, is published in a report by the US-China Economic and Security review commission.

It found that China Telecom sent incorrect routing information, but it is not clear whether it was intentional.

It comes amid continuing discussions in the US and the UK about cyber-security.

Among traffic rerouted via China was that destined for the US Senate website, the Office of the Secretary of Defence, Nasa and the Commerce Department, the report said.

"Evidence related to this incident does not clearly indicate whether it was perpetrated intentionally and, if so, to what ends," according to the draft report obtained by Reuters.

"However, computer security researchers have noted that the capability could enable severe malicious activities," it added.

The danger of cyber-attacks has been high on global agendas recently.

This week, US Defence Secretary Robert Gates warned that cyber-attacks posed a huge future threat and urged more joined-up efforts between the US military and civilian agencies.

MPs in the UK have also been hearing about the risks of cyber-attacks.

In evidence given to the Science and Technology Committee, experts said that a concerted cyber-attack capable of damaging key infrastructure could currently only be launched by an enemy state.

Stuxnet fears

"The risk of a concerted attack which has fundamental effect on infrastructure would have to be at state level and therefore politically unlikely," said Dr Hayes, a senior fellow at the Microsoft Institute for Advanced Technology in Governments.

But he said the tools were there for either politically-motivated hackers or organised criminals to launch an attack.

"If I see a nuclear weapon, I need plutonium, but cyber-weapons are just a sequence of ones and zeros. We have concerns that Stuxnet could be copied," he said.

"The risk of that is high and could have localised effect on critical infrastructure," he told MPs.

The recent Stuxnet malware, which appeared to be targeted at Iran's nuclear power plant, has caused alarm in governments around the world about a new wave of state-sponsored cyber-attacks.

Dalai Lama

Dr Ross Anderson, from the University of Cambridge, told MPs that Stuxnet was a sophisticated piece of malware.

"We can surmise it was from someone who didn't like the Iranians refining uranium. It took six people five months to write. It appears whoever commissioned it had access to people whose business was writing malware, as well as people clearly expert in industrial control systems.

It was an effort funded to the order of �1m or thereabouts," he said.

Experts have surmised that its complexity means it could only have been written by a nation state.

Mr Anderson told MPs that he had personal involvement into state-sponsored malware attacks.

"A couple of years ago, a student of mine helped the Dalai Lama's office clear up malware clearly from the Chinese government," he said.

Currently, though, the biggest risk to UK computer systems was still the prospect of internal system failures as upgrades to the net addressing system began, he said.

"The most likely cause of disruption to the internet comes from software failure associated with transition to IPV6," he said.

But he warned that the threat of external attacks was likely to get worse over time, as more and more systems became computerised.

Experts needed

Mr Anderson said that government needed to become more "IT-aware".

"Regulators such as Ofgem and Ofcom should have people on their staff who understand IT and the risk we could be sleepwalking into," he said.

He warned that the government needed to do more.

"We have never put enough into combating cyber-crime. The Metropolitan police have difficulty sustaining e-crime units, because they are forever being closed down or merged," he said.

He aid that the situation was not helped because the culture of the UK's security body GCHQ was non-collaborative, unlike that of the US's National Security Agency.

"Currently there are two separate communities, the civil community and the defence community. Outside of the defence community there is no source of expertise," he said.

"Bodies like the Information Commissioner's Office and the Metropolitan police don't have their own engineering staff, so are beholden to Cheltenham [the base for GCHQ] for advice."

He was not convinced that GCHQ was the right body for the job.

"It may take a cyber-attack to convince the prime minister that GCHQ is incompetent and things need to be changed," he said.



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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

China crowned supercomputer king

China's Tianhe-1A supercomputer has been confirmed as the most powerful in the world.

Confirmation came with the publication of the latest list of the Top 500 supercomputers on the planet.

Tianhe-1A has a peak speed of 2.57 petaflops, far higher than the US XT5 Jaguar that can manage 1.76 petaflops.

The list also reveals significant changes in the technology used to power the machines and the nations hosting the most powerful ones.

Unconfirmed reports that Tianhe-1A would take the top spot on the list emerged in late October. Since then no other more powerful computers machines have emerged to knock it off the number one position.

Located at China's National Supercomputer Centre in Tianjin much of the machine's processing power comes from chips more typically found in graphics cards. It is expected to be doing simulations to help Chinese weather forecasts and to help with work to locate undersea oil fields.

Of the top four machines on the list, three are now largely built around graphics processors. By contrast the US Jaguar supercomputer that Tianhe-1A has pushed into second place is built around more traditional CPUs typically used in desktop computers.

The top seven supercomputers on the list can now all carry out at least one petaflop which is the equivalent of 1,000 trillion calculations per second.

The latest Top 500 list also reveals that the US is slipping down the rankings of supercomputer superpowers. Only five of the top ten machines are in the US, a change from other years in which American supercomputers have typically dominated the upper regions of the Top 500 list.

The US maintains its spot as the nation with the most supercomputers in the Top 500 list and China is now second. However, it has a long way to go to catch up as the US has 275 machines in the top 500 and China has only 42.



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Beatles albums offered on iTunes

The Beatles' back catalogue is finally available on iTunes, after years of negotiations.

It will mean that for the first time consumers will be able to purchase some of the Fab Four's most popular songs via the store.

Apple and record label EMI have been in talks for years about getting the catalogue online.

Apple chief executive and Beatles fan Steve Jobs said it had "been a long and winding road to get here".

"We love the Beatles and are honoured and thrilled to welcome them to iTunes," he said.

Sir Paul McCartney echoed his thoughts.

"It's fantastic to see the songs we originally released on vinyl receive as much love in the digital world as they did the first time around," he said.

Ringo Starr added: "I'm particularly glad to no longer be asked when the Beatles are coming to iTunes."

Trademark dispute

But not everyone was convinced it was such a big deal.

Writing in his blog, Mark Mulligan, an analyst with research firm Forrester, said it was not the younger generation of digital music fans craved.

"The fact that securing the content of a band old enough to be most young music fans' grandfathers is a sad reflection of the state of the digital music market," he said.

"The digital music market needs new music products, not yesteryear's hits repackaged," he added.

For years The Beatles' music label Apple Corps was involved in a bitter trademark dispute with Apple the computer company. The dispute was finally settled in 2007.

Earlier in the year Sir Paul McCartney hinted that part of the delay in getting a deal with Apple was down to EMI.

Beatles USB

The Beatles catalogue has been a noticeable absence from the iTunes store despite the fact that solo works of members of the band are on sale there.

There have been forays into the digital world for the band.

Last year EMI released limited edition apple-shaped USB drives containing The Beatles' studio albums as digital files.

And in September 2009, The Beatles: Rock Band video game was released.

Even though the group formed around 50 years ago, they remain one of the top-selling bands in the world.

Neilsen SoundScan reported that they have sold more than 30 million albums in the past decade.

EMI has said that with worldwide sales of one billion albums, the Beatles are the top-selling band in music history.

The deal with Apple comes amid uncertainty at EMI.

The company's owner, private equity firm Terra Firma Capital Partners, owes millions in debt payments to Citigroup, which helped bankroll the purchase of EMI in 2007.

Ben Rumley from Enders Analysis says the Beatles' arrival is as important for EMI as it is for consumers.

"EMI will make some money selling The Beatles once again," he told BBC 6 Music.

"The Beatles were about 10% of their sales in the US last year, excluding digital, so having The Beatles available online can clearly be a good thing. They're very good at exploiting them."

The iTunes music store opened in 2003 and is now the largest music retailer in the world.

The Beatles albums are available for purchase and download for �10.99 each, double albums for �17.99 and individual songs for 99p.

A box set, containing all 13 remastered studio albums is available for �125. It includes the Beatles very first US concert in its entirety.



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Monday, November 15, 2010

Facebook ramps up competition

Facebook has ramped up competition with AOL, Yahoo, Microsoft and Google with a product to rival their email services.

Facebook Messages aims to tie users more closely to the social networking site at a time when everyone is battling for their attention.

The product will merge texts, online chats, and emails into one central hub.

Facebook said traditional email is too slow and cumbersome and needs to step into the modern world of messaging.

"This is not an email killer," Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg told reporters and analysts at an event in San Francisco.

"Maybe we can help push the way people do messaging more towards this simple, real time, immediate personal experience. Email is still really important to a lot of people. We think this simple messaging is how people will shift their communication," added Mr Zuckerberg.

'Killer app'

In a case of bad timing, reports surfaced hours after the Facebook launch that Gmail suffered an outage.

The new service is seen as offering an alternative to Gmail, the fastest growing web service in the past year with over 193 million users according to data tracker ComScore.

The irony was that ahead of the announcement, speculation was rife that Facebook's new product would be most crippling for Gmail. Mr Zuckerberg said he did not see it that way.

"In reality they have a great product.

"We don't expect anyone to wake up tomorrow and say 'I'm going to shut down my Yahoo Mail or Gmail account'.

"Maybe one day, six months, a year, two years out people will start to say this is how the future should work," said Mr Zuckerberg.

AOL which at the weekend previewed changes to its once popular web mail service disagreed email is doomed.

"Email remains one of the killer apps on the internet," said Brad Garlinghouse, AOL's senior vice president of consumer products.

Industry analyst Augie Ray of Forrester agreed.

"Research we have done shows we know that in the US 90% of adults check their mail at least once a month and 59% of adults say they maintain a profile on a social networking site.

"There is a big gap between the reach social media has and the reach email has."

Ease of use

At the heart of Facebook Messages is an effort to ensure users "see the messages that matter".

The new feature will simplify how people communicate whether it be via text, instant messages, online chat or email. All these messages will come into one feed known as a social inbox allowing users to reply in any way they want.

Facebook said around 70% of users regularly use it to send messages to friends and and that a total of four billion messages pass across the site every day.

"We really want to enable people to have conversations with the people they care about," Facebook's director of engineering Andrew "Boz" Bosworth told BBC News.

"It sounds so simple. We have all this technology that should be enabling that but it's not. It's fragmenting that. So I have one conversation on email with my grandfather and another with my cousin on sms and all these things don't work the same way.

"I shouldn't have to worry about the technology. I should just have to worry about the person and the message. Everything else is just getting in the way," added Mr Bosworth.

The new system will be modelled more on chat than traditional email which means there will be no subject lines, cc or bcc fields.

Liz Gannes of technology blog AllThingsD said she believed users will have a bit of a learning curve on their hands.

"I think the product is just different enough from what people are used to that it will feel really weird to users for a while.

"The lack of subject lines will get people upset at first and then of course they will probably realise they never wanted them anyway."

'Game over?'

Other features include being able to store conversations so users can have a complete archive of communications with friends and family. Mr Bosworth likened this to a modern day treasure trove of letters stored in a box.

Incoming message will be placed in one of three folders - one for friends, another for things like bank statements and a junk folder for messages people do not want to see.

The product will also represent a challenge to Yahoo with over 273 million users and Microsoft which has nearly 362 million.

"For me today represents the day when Facebook truly becomes a portal on the level of Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL," Charlene Li social media analyst with the Altimeter Group told BBC News.

"They now have to start making their inboxes more social. Friends are the new priority as opposed to the conversation. This makes Facebook so much more functional."

Robert Scoble technology writer and founder of Scobleizer.com said this product gives everyone something to aim for.

"This is a new kind of communications system but its not game over for Yahoo and Gmail and all the others because it will take decades to get people to stop doing traditional emails.

"However this is something new and very powerful because Facebook can tap into my social graph and ensure that only my friends are there and I won't get spammed."

Facebook said this product was the biggest the social networking giant had worked on to date.

The company will also offer an @facebook.com email address to every one of its more than 500 million users.



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Facebook revamps messaging system

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.

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.

"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.



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