Here's what we think we might hear from the social networking site when it announces its latest creation at 10 a.m. Pacific Time tomorrow at its Palo Alto, California headquarters.
Project Spartan
Using HTML5 in Facebook's mobile apps would be smart. The company would not need to depend on Apple to approve its app for inclusion in the App Store over seemingly minor updates to functionality within its app, and could unify the experience from platform to platform.
But -- not so fast! MG Siegler at TechCrunch reports that Project Spartan won't be ready until the middle of this month at the earliest. It also seems likely that these features would be rolled out gradually and not need a press conference to unveil them.
New iPad App
For whatever reason, the social networking site has left the task of iPad development to third parties -- much to the chagrin of some users. Obviously, the Facebook iPad experience leaves a little to be desired, and social networking by Apple's tablet is certainly not as good as if Facebook's coders did it themselves.
Zuckerberg is said to be working closely with developers on crafting the user experience of this said app, so a press conference with him playing a major role makes sense.
But then again, developers may want to wait for the completion of Project Spartan before releasing the app -- no reason to recode it for any necessary changes.
New Photo-Sharing App
TechCrunch's revelation of a photo-sharing app certainly had the tech world abuzz several weeks back. The company is apparently going after Instagram, Path, and Color all at once with its offering, while aiming to make its photo experience that much more social.Conflicting information seems to now exist as to whether Facebook plans to make this a standalone application or integrate it into the current Facebook application. Again, this all seems dependent on Project Spartan's progress.
Partner with Skype on Video Chat
A partnership would be a major coup d'etat for Skype, which would immediately gain access to Facebook's 750 million-person userbase -- and it would certainly make Microsoft's $8 billion investment in the company look a little more reasonable. Some analysts have said they expect Microsoft to hook Skype up with Facebook in some form since the deal was announced in May.
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