Monday, September 19, 2011

Button 'Subscribe' Facebook, Twitter Compete

Many people love Twitter because of the side of practicality than Facebook. In Facebook, if you receive a friend request from someone, then automatically you will be able to get all the updates its status, and vice versa. However, in Twitter, if you do not follow someone, then you will not see the status or tweet someone even though he was to follow you.


Facebook drawback is if you want to follow the celebrity status, you must send a friend request. If the request is ignored, you will not be able to get a status update of these celebrities. However, Facebook is now changing. Social networking sites with the largest user is making a feature similar to Twitter.
Such a feature is called Subscribe. Subscribe button is available in stages so that any Facebook user can use these buttons. Subscribe is a service that helps users to keep getting updates the status of a person despite not being a friend on Facebook. Try clicking the following link http://www.facebook.com/about/subscribe then click on "allow subscribers" and fill out the form that appears.
There will be a question whether you allow other people to your subscriber, if so, select on. Then there is the question of whether you allow subsriber you submit comments, if so, select on. Then click okay, then everybody will be able to get your status updates without having to be a friend on Facebook. Other people who have not become friends in Facebook can choose the subscriber when the request is ignored by your friendship.
"Now you can find out information from journalists, celebrities and political figures, and others as well. Click the Subscribe button on the profile of someone to get their public updates on your News Feed," Facebook said as quoted by the Telegraph website.
Subscriber is a new button will appear on every page of Facebook users, in addition to the right message and adding friends. This button allows everyone subscribed to update the public of those desired. Instead, you can also read the status of other people around the world without having to make friends with your subscribers.
The move is seen by experts as a direct challenge to Twitter and attempts to make more people share a large amount of public information, not just with their friends. Interestingly, when Facebook users to send a friend request to someone else, they automatically become a subscriber now update the status of the user, without having to click the Subscribe button again.
On 2 September 2011 Facebook reportedly will announce a digital music service in partnership with Spotify and MOG. We'll see what else will be done up to provide services for hundreds of millions of active users.

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