Facebook Purchases WhatsApp for $16 Billion

And then have sparingly experimented with UI concept designs...
drib_small.jpg

At first glance I though, oh yay, another weather app. It seems like there's a new one every day. But I actually quite like the way you've got the 12 hours broken down in the middle. That's nice.

I skinned a VOIP app last year for a client and am currently doing a real time sports betting platform for desktop and mobile. I need to get involved in a project that I have a stake in instead of just doing client work.

This is a pretty handy resource, basically all "app" designs from Behance posted on one site... App Design Served :: Gallery
 


At first glance I though, oh yay, another weather app. It seems like there's a new one every day. But I actually quite like the way you've got the 12 hours broken down in the middle. That's nice.

I skinned a VOIP app last year for a client and am currently doing a real time sports betting platform for desktop and mobile. I need to get involved in a project that I have a stake in instead of just doing client work.

This is a pretty handy resource, basically all "app" designs from Behance posted on one site... App Design Served :: Gallery

Yup I did it primarily for a tutorial on my youtube channel, and it's the best idea I could come up with on the spot.

pretty cool resource though.
 
Twitter and Facebook only hires the best of the best engineers out there.

Job denied by Twitter:
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Later, denied by Facebook:
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Walking into Facebook HQ and joining the board. Next, firing the interviewer.
 
might be a dumb question here...

when a company acquires a certain app. is that company basically buying the userbase + brand and such?

because with the amount of resources fb/google have. wouldn't it be possible for them to just create a better version of certain apps? (or even copy)

i.e - CandyCrush copying CandySwipe.
 

+ the team.

Although in this case the team becomes an insignificant proportion of the price, for many smaller apps it can be the bulk of the price.

A small, awesome team can often be bought in the 7 figures per head range.

might be a dumb question here...

when a company acquires a certain app. is that company basically buying the userbase + brand and such?

because with the amount of resources fb/google have. wouldn't it be possible for them to just create a better version of certain apps? (or even copy)

i.e - CandyCrush copying CandySwipe.

Your mentality is what stops most people starting businesses.

Facebook copied Snapchat a fair while ago. Basically built the same app:
Facebook Poke Vs. Snapchat: What’s The Difference? | TechCrunch

It failed miserably.

Google copied Facebook to some extent with its entrance into social. Google+ traction is coming a heck of a lot slower than Facebook achieved it, despite having hundreds of millions of accounts to try and force onto the network.

Smaller companies that are focused on solving one specific problem tend to solve it much better than big companies that are trying to do hundreds of things and where things move a lot slower. Building a product with "more features" or having more capital isn't enough to build an app that gets traction.

A lot of it is building an app at a time where the market is just ready to receive it, and blam, hockey stick growth. No imitator can then overtake it, unless they severely screw up (at least until the company matures, at which point it risks being taken out by new innovation... hence Facebook's frothy acquisition attempts of anyone it feels is a threat to its model).

If you want to build a great app, web or mobile, think about something that a big product/service does, but could do better. Take that one specific thing, and focus on doing it as well as you possibly can. It sounds much simpler than it is in practice, but that's a decent recipe for success these days.
 
Where is that one guys "just kidding" stamp when you need it?

Well it's "only" $4b in cash, the rest is stock. FB has bought a huge database of users that will continue to grow ridiculously quickly, which will have competitively small, maintenance costs, can very much be monetised..

Yeah, I think it's a pretty good deal.
 
Well it's "only" $4b in cash, the rest is stock. FB has bought a huge database of users that will continue to grow ridiculously quickly, which will have competitively small, maintenance costs, can very much be monetised..

Yeah, I think it's a pretty good deal.



I thought they were mostly users who already tried to get away from facebook.
 
I thought they were mostly users who already tried to get away from facebook.

But that isn't a problem as these users won't ever need to be on the Facebook platform for Facebook (the company) to profit from them. It's like someone who hates Coke drinking Sprite. The money's going into the same pockets either way.
 
This is the cost of not being innovative at all.
Seems like these conglomerates just pay whatever the fuck they need for another few years of shelf life.
 
“WhatsApp is on a path to connect 1 billion people. The services that reach that milestone are all incredibly valuable,” said Mark Zuckerberg.

You just paid $19 per free sign up*1,000,000,000.

Good luck earning a return from people unwilling to pay 10 cents for a text message.