Facebook Timeline soon to be mandatory
ANICK JESDANUN
NEW PROFILE: The Facebook Timeline.
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Facebook will start requiring people to switch to a new profile format known as Timeline, making photos, links and personal musings from the past much easier to find.
Timeline is essentially a scrapbook of your whole life on Facebook, compared with a snapshot of you today found on Facebook's traditional profile page. Once activated, Timeline replaces the current profile.
Although some people have already voluntarily switched to Timeline, Facebook hadn't made that mandatory. Beginning Tuesday, Facebook is telling some users that they have seven days to clean up their profiles before Timeline gets automatically activated. Facebook is rolling out the requirement to others over the next few weeks.
At some point, even those who haven't logged on to Facebook in a while will be automatically switched.
Timeline doesn't expose anything that wasn't available for sharing in the past. Many of those older posts had always been available. People could get to them by continually hitting "Older Posts," although most wouldn't have bothered. Timeline allows people to jump to the older material more quickly.
Timeline also doesn't necessarily reflect the fact that your circle of friends has likely expanded in recent years. A party photo you posted in 2008 to a small group of friends would be more visible to relatives, bosses and others you may have added as friends since then.
You'll have a week to curate the Timeline by moving stuff around, hiding photos or featuring them more prominently on your page.
Some things to consider:
*You can change privacy settings on individual items to control who has access. You might want to narrow embarrassing photos to your closest friends or delete some posts completely, or at least hide them so only you can see them.
*You can change the date on a post. For example, if you took a few months to post photos from a trip to Portugal, you can move them to appear with other posts from the time you took that trip. You can also add where you were, retroactively using a location feature that Facebook hadn't offered until recently.
*For major events in your life, you can click on a star to feature them more prominently. You can hide the posts you'd rather not showcase.
*Besides your traditional profile photo — your headshot — you can add what Facebook calls a cover photo. It's the image that will splash across the top and can be a dog, a hobby or anything else that reflects who you are. Keep in mind the dimensions are more like a movie screen than a traditional photo, so a close-up portrait of your face won't work well, but one of you lying horizontally will. But you don't even have to be in it.
*You can add things before you joined Facebook, back to when you were born. Life events can include when you broke your arm and whom you were with then, or when you spoke your first word or got a tattoo. You can add photos from childhood or high school as well.
*If you feel overwhelmed with so many posts to go through, start with your older ones. Those are the ones you'd need to be most careful about because you had reason to believe only a few friends would see them.
*Click on Activity Log to see all of your posts at a glance and make changes to them one by one. Open Facebook in a new browser tab first, though. That way, you can have one tab for the log and the other for the main Timeline.
- AP
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This new formate is a bit of a nightmare to use. It keeps wanting to reset itself to the top of the page when I am scrolling down. It's also a messy layout. But I hope FB is addressing this issue & finding a patch.
I don't care about the content ov my FB profile being more "exposed".
I don't post up stuff that I deem embarrassing or otherwise anyway.
But I think the new format is pretty rum really. It is hard to navigate.
As for that person who says that people get used to the change...well look at what happened to MYSPACE last year. They made one big change too many and people left in droves!! Mainly bound for FB ov course.
What you gotta remember is even though the service is free ov $$$ expenses, it costs the users time and energy. And their time and energy is what makes a social networking site like FB what it is.
Without the users a social networking site becomes a ghost town.
p.s. Lets just hope that one day the headline does not read: "Facebook to be mandatory for all citizens"...
Yeah, I don't use FBI. I think anyone who uses FBI is throwing caution to the winds. And now, with this timeline thing... exactly how many people out there seriously want a scrapbook of their lives for all to see? I really don't think I could bring myself to look at my own "scrapbook of my life"! A Google search is ego destroying enough. Maybe if I was good looking and had heaps of real friends! Oh well, enjoy your FBI; the greatest social engineering ploy in history! HA HA!
James McKerrow #66 & others
Information about you =/= your information. This is something people should bear in mind. Whether you care or not, you should at least know what it is that your vehemently defending/attacking.
if you don't like it you can stop using the FREE service, or you can go and buy face book for US$700B and force it to be changed back, not going to do either of those, then shut up and stop wasting air!
some people think they have the right to complain about everything.
Got the timeline as soon as I could by registering myself as a developer. Nice to see an actual, tangible change on the website.
Anyone who says that they "want the old FB back" needs to stop for a moment and realise that the 'old FB' was only the most recent 'new FB' and that when it came out, people were making the same complaints as they are now.
> FB changes > "New FB sucks" > people get used to it > FB changes > "New FB sucks, bring back old FB" > people get used to it > FB changes > "New FB sucks, bring back old FB" > etc
@MyssLady #70
Bebo eventually made it compulsory for everyone though...
Anyway I don't mind the changes, didn't like it at first but got used to it. Just like you all will. Stop complaining. It ain't a democracy. Zuckerburg can actually do whatever he pleases with it.
@ Alegna #71 - Its not the fact that we don't like change, its pretty much don't fix something thats not broken?
@ Joey #63 - its not about life being exposed and being all embarressed its the fact as I said above "Don't fix something that's not broken"
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the new format sux!!!!!!