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25/05/2014

How to sort your Facebook feed by time on mobile

Weddings. Job promotions. News articles. Facebook thinks it knows what the best stories are to drop in your news feed. But some users might want to see things their own way.

As an alternative to its default filtering algorithm, Facebook provides a way to sort your friends’ posts by chronology in its mobile apps. But some people say the process for doing so is not that awesome.

After a recent change to Facebook’s app on iOS, a number of users say the company has essentially buried the sort-by-time feature. Taking to online discussion boards to complain, they also lament the fact that there is no way to set the mode as a default on mobile.

Facebook’s algorithm sorts posts that appear in people’s news feeds, using signals such as the number of likes the posts generate and who posted them. As a result, posts that generate a lot of activity can stay lodged toward the top of users’ feeds, maybe even over the course of a day. Facebook calls this default setting “top stories.”

For users opting for a chronological view of their posts, there is an easy way to change the setting on the desktop. But changing the setting on Android—and now iOS—requires a different process, one that some users don’t like, or aren’t even aware of. In this video, we’ll show you how to navigate the sort-by-time feature on both mobile and desktop.

To change your News Feed so that posts appear chronologically, tap on the More tab in either the Android or iOS version of Facebook’s mobile app. From there, scroll down to a bar labeled Feeds and tap on Most Recent. Now you’ll see items in your News Feed in order of the time they were posted. Note that if you navigate to other parts of the app—Notifications, say—you’ll need to tap on the More tab to return to the chronological listing. You also can’t make time sorting your default view on mobile.

facebook desktop most recent
The dropdown arrow next to News Feed in Facebook’s desktop version lets you toggle between Top Stories and Most Recent.

It’s easier on the desktop version of Facebook. Click on the dropdown arrow next to News Feed in the lefthand column and select Most Recent for a chronological listing of posts.

Besides time, Facebook also provides some other personalized news feed options based around users’ personal affiliations, jobs worked and schools attended. Users can add specific people to these lists if they want, which can be accessed from both mobile and the desktop.

Facebook is constantly tweaking its filtering algorithm. Late last year, as part of an effort to display more “high-quality” content, the company said it would be emphasizing news articles in the feed. But high quality to one person may be of a different quality to another.

Google selling Motorola phone business to LenovoGoogle is selling Motorola's smartphone business to Lenovo for $2.9 bill...
27/03/2014

Google selling Motorola phone business to Lenovo

Google is selling Motorola's smartphone business to Lenovo for $2.9 billion, a price that makes Google's biggest acquisition look like its most expensive mistake.

The deal announced today will rid Google of a financial headache that has plagued the internet company since buying Motorola Mobility for $12.4 billion in 2012. Motorola has lost nearly $2 billion since Google took over, while trimming its workforce from 20,000 to 3,800.

Google had previously recovered some of the money that it spent on Motorola by selling the company's set-top operations last year to Arris Group Inc. for $2.35 billion. Google is also keeping most of the patents that came with the Motorola purchase.

It's unclear if Google will have to absorb a charge to account for the difference between what it paid for Motorola Mobility and what it is getting back. The Mountain View, California, company may address the issue later this week when it announces its fourth-quarter earnings after the market closes.

Most investors viewed Motorola as an unnecessary drain on Google's profit, a perspective that was reflected by Wall Street's reaction to the sale. Google's stock gained $28.08, or 2.5 per cent, to $1,135 in extended trading.

While Google is backpedalling, Lenovo Group is gearing up for a major expansion. Already the world's largest maker of personal computers, Lenovo now appears determined to become a bigger player in smartphones as more people rely on them instead of laptop and desktop computers to go online.

Lenovo already is among the smartphone leaders in its home country of China, but it has been looking for ways to expand its presence in other markets, especially the US and Latin America. The company had been rumoured to be among the prospective buyers for BlackBerry when that troubled smartphone maker was mulling a sale last year.

This marks Lenovo's second high-profile deal this month. The company announced plans last week to buy a major piece of IBM's computer server business for $2.3 billion.

Buying Motorola will enable Lenovo to join Apple as the only major technology companies with global product lines in PCs, smartphones and tablets, putting Lenovo in a better position to become a one-stop shop for companies to buy all their devices from the same vendor, said Forrester Research analyst Frank Gillett.

"This makes Lenovo a company to watch," Gillett said in an email. "The personal device manufacturer business is consolidating and manufacturers must compete in all three device markets, plus emerging wearable categories, or get left out of the next market shift."

After it takes over, Lenovo plans to retain a Motorola management team led by Dennis Woodside. Google had reassigned Woodside, one of its top executive, to run Motorola Mobility in hopes he could engineer a turnaround. Under Woodside, Motorola released two new smartphones last year, the Moto X and Moto G. The phones attracted lots of headlines, but didn't sell as well as anticipated, analysts say.

Lenovo executives also said they aren't planning to lay off any more Motorola employees and that the subsidiary would remain based in its current headquarters in Libertyville, Illinois.

"We buy this business, we buy this team as our treasure," Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing said during a conference call.

Google is retaining most of Motorola's portfolio of mobile patents, providing the company with legal protection for its widely used Android software for smartphones and tablet computers. Gaining control of Motorola's patents was the main reason Google CEO Larry Page decided to pay so much for Motorola Mobility at a time the smartphone maker was already losing money and market share.

Most analysts thought Page had paid too much money for Motorola and questioned why Google wanted to own a smartphone maker at the risk of alienating other mobile device makers that rely on Android.

Selling Motorola's smartphone operations will "enable Google to devote our energy to driving innovation across the Android ecosystem," Page said in a statement.

Lenovo is picking up about 2,000 Motorola patents in addition to the phone manufacturing operations.

HP planning to enter 3D printing marketAt Hewlett-Packard's annual shareholder meeting, CEO Meg Whitman announced that t...
25/03/2014

HP planning to enter 3D printing market

At Hewlett-Packard's annual shareholder meeting, CEO Meg Whitman announced that the company is "hot on the case of 3D printing" and will make "a big technology announcement" on the subject this June.
The 3D printing industry is still in its infancy, and there are plenty of issues to resolve before the technology reaches the mainstream. But according to Whitman, HP's researchers may have solved many of these issues, indicating that the brand could soon present a 3D printer that is faster than current models and has a higher quality output.
The executive indicated that HP would initially focus on the enterprise market before developing 3D printers for individual consumers.

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