Technology
Facebook Messenger Rooms arrive in the U.S., Mexico, and Canada
It’s the moment at least a couple people have been waiting for: Facebook Messenger Rooms have dropped.
Mark Zuckerberg announced in a Facebook post Thursday that Messenger Rooms, the social media network’s answer to Zoom, are now available to everyone in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. The video chat feature will be also be available globally “in the next week.”
Facebook first announced the feature at the end of April, but did not provide details about when it would be available other than “soon.” Props to the Facebook engineers who clearly busted their butts to deliver this timely product.
Messenger Rooms work similarly to Zoom in that all you need is a URL — not an account — to join. You can tie rooms to events or groups, only send them out to a select group of people, or post them so friends can “stop by,” à la Houseparty.
“You don’t need to schedule time to hang out like other video conferencing tools — it’s much more serendipitous and fun,” Zuckerberg writes, like the totally normal and non-robot human he is.
Some additional advantages to using Rooms are that it displays participants in tile mode, can host up to 50 people, and there’s no time limit (Zoom calls on free accounts have a time limit of 40 minutes). Plus, in some countries where Facebook is the primary means of communication, the new video chat product could be a boon.
However, there are plenty of reasons to not make Messenger Rooms your video chatting platform of choice. Chief among them: it’s a product made by Facebook, a company with a notoriously terrible privacy record, with a primary business of learning as much about you in order to help companies sell you things. You can take a closer look at all the privacy-oriented reasons you might want to be skeptical of Messenger Rooms here.
-
Entertainment7 days ago
Earth’s mini moon could be a chunk of the big moon, scientists say
-
Entertainment7 days ago
The space station is leaking. Why it hasn’t imperiled the mission.
-
Entertainment6 days ago
‘Dune: Prophecy’ review: The Bene Gesserit shine in this sci-fi showstopper
-
Entertainment5 days ago
Black Friday 2024: The greatest early deals in Australia – live now
-
Entertainment4 days ago
How to watch ‘Smile 2’ at home: When is it streaming?
-
Entertainment4 days ago
‘Wicked’ review: Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo aspire to movie musical magic
-
Entertainment3 days ago
A24 is selling chocolate now. But what would their films actually taste like?
-
Entertainment3 days ago
New teen video-viewing guidelines: What you should know