(MoneyWatch) Changes are afoot over at everyone's favorite social network, Facebook. By now, you've probably heard about Graph Search, even if you don't yet have access to it. The good news is that if ...
One of the most coveted Facebook features released earlier this year is undoubtedly the Graph Search, which essentially makes it easier for anyone to find people, photos, places, and interests to ...
<b>commentary</b> Despite improvements, the new social-networking dimension being given to U.S. members is too difficult to navigate, very unsettling, and not yet advertiser-friendly. Jennifer Van ...
Facebook says it likes to move fast, but it took its sweet time rolling out one feature to mobile devices. A year after introducing its Graph Search tool for more broadly searching data sitting on the ...
What’s everyone saying about Breaking Bad? What about just my friends? What do my old photo comments say about me? A trillion posts full of this info start getting unlocked today as Facebook begins ...
Facebook’s Graph Search is the future of search. Even before Google was a verb, the search engine Holy Grail was to deliver you the most relevant search results despite not knowing who you were and ...
With the introduction of its Graph Search feature, Facebook is trying to turn the vast store of data about relationships between people, places, and things into something useful for its users: a ...
Where there’s discovery, there’s opportunity for sponsored discovery. Though there are no ads in Facebook’s new Graph Search engine yet, eventually Facebook could let advertisers pay to show their ...
Facebook in January trumpeted Graph Search as the social network’s “third pillar” (pillars one and two are Timeline and News Feed), which sounds very impressive and important, but few people have been ...
This convergence was long-predicted: ever since the rise of Facebook started to shake Google’s dominance on the web (and the online advertising market). Search is great provided you know what to look ...
<b>commentary</b> Before taking on Google, the social network will have to convince people to deviate from the only learned search behavior they know: looking for people. That's a tall order. Jennifer ...