There is no content / argument to this article outside of "FaceBook is adding so many features in reaction to Google+."
The articles evidence:
I read an article about the eventual possibility of Google overcoming FB’s dominance, and am starting to think the mighty Facebook could be on its way down. Why? Too many changes, additions, deletions to what was once a successful, popular recipe. This is what I’m calling the software version of “the New Coke”, and it oddly mimics what I think clinched the death of MySpace:
> But I think it’s curious that Facebook has reacted so strongly to Google+: for such a small network (relatively) they seem quite afraid of it, going to the point of trying to match all of its innovations.
Why is this curious?
A giant, appallingly successful company (believed by many to be "the internet") launched a beautifully designed, direct competitor to your only product. They promote their competing product on every webpage they own, and they have gone so far as to stake employee compensation on the success of their competing product.
Why on Earth wouldn't Facebook be afraid? Why wouldn't they react strongly?
This post fails to support its titular claim: that Facebook is "stumbling" all over itself. Normal, ad-clicking, non-social-media-expert users love Facebook. They love being connected, and they love broadcasting to world. Facebook is stumbling only once those users leave.
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[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 21.9 ms ] threadThe articles evidence: I read an article about the eventual possibility of Google overcoming FB’s dominance, and am starting to think the mighty Facebook could be on its way down. Why? Too many changes, additions, deletions to what was once a successful, popular recipe. This is what I’m calling the software version of “the New Coke”, and it oddly mimics what I think clinched the death of MySpace:
Why is this curious?
A giant, appallingly successful company (believed by many to be "the internet") launched a beautifully designed, direct competitor to your only product. They promote their competing product on every webpage they own, and they have gone so far as to stake employee compensation on the success of their competing product.
Why on Earth wouldn't Facebook be afraid? Why wouldn't they react strongly?
This post fails to support its titular claim: that Facebook is "stumbling" all over itself. Normal, ad-clicking, non-social-media-expert users love Facebook. They love being connected, and they love broadcasting to world. Facebook is stumbling only once those users leave.