Saturday, April 25, 2020

Facebook Launches Zoom Competitor

Facebook announced Friday it’s making a big push into live videoconferencing, capitalizing on millions of people stuck home globally amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Washington Post reports the new service, called Messenger Rooms, allows users to conference with up to 50 people at a time — similar to Zoom, Houseparty and other videoconferencing services that have seen their businesses boom over the past few weeks.

In a live-streamed announcement, chief executive Mark Zuckerberg billed it as another way Facebook can keep people connected.

“Video presence isn’t just about calling someone,” he said. “It is starting to be a fundamental building block of a private social platform with lots of new use cases.”



Videoconferencing has become a necessity during the pandemic, as workers telecommute and families use video to stay in touch. It has even become a destination for happy hours and dance parties.

Zoom, in particular, has benefited. The videoconferencing company recently said the number of people participating in Zoom calls on a single day grew from 10 million at the end of December to more than 300 million people now. The free version of Zoom limits group calls to 40 minutes until you sign up for a paid subscription, but it can accommodate 1,000 people.

Facebook’s Messenger Rooms is in some ways more limited than Zoom — it must be started from Facebook or Messenger, though others who join don’t need a Facebook account. It’s limited to a total of 50 people.

But Facebook said Messenger Rooms will be free and won’t have a time limit. The new Facebook feature also allows people to drop in and join other rooms, or come and go as they please (though you can restrict who has access to your rooms) — much like the newly popular Houseparty app.

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