Friday, November 24, 2017

Facebook Messenger Promises Speedy Delivery of 4K Pics

Facebook on Tuesday raised the ante for messaging apps photo quality with the announcement of 4K support for Messenger.


"We're making significant investments in how people communicate visually on Messenger," wrote Facebook Messenger product managers Sean Kelly and Hagen Green in an online post. Starting Tuesday, "people can send and receive photos in Messenger at 4K resolution -- or up to 4,096 x 4,096 pixels per image -- the highest quality many smartphones support."

Although the need for speed in a messaging app and the size of 4K photo files would seem to work at odds with each other, that apparently is not the case with the Messenger upgrade.

"Your photos will also be sent just as quickly as before, even at this new, higher resolution," Kelly and Green maintained.

Speed is important. Viewers will start to abandon content if it takes more than two seconds to start up, research from Akamai suggests. What's more, with each incremental second of delay, the abandonment rate increases 5.8 percent.

Catching Up

The new 4K support will be transparent to users.

After upgrading to the new version of Messenger, a user can open a conversation, tap the camera roll icon, select a photo and hit send.
The recipient then will receive the high resolution photo.

The 4K resolution support will be available immediately for both iPhone and Android phones in the United States, Canada, France, Australia, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea, according to Kelly and Green. The feature will be introduced in other countries in the coming weeks.

"Facebook's announcement to support 4K is actually just about catching up with the market," said Andreas Scherer, managing partner at Salto Partners.
"Smartphones from Apple, Samsung and Google are already supporting the 4K format," he told TechNewsWorld.

Table Stakes

With 4K support in Messenger, Facebook is taking advantage of the higher-resolution screens in the latest smartphones, noted Ross Rubin, principal analyst at Reticle Research.

"This is an opportunity for Messenger users to enjoy a richer photo experience," he told TechNewsWorld.

"4K also keeps users within the app, which is where Facebook can control the environment," Rubin pointed out. "4K photos may not give Messenger a sustainable advantage over other messaging programs -- but then again, given its massive installed base, it doesn't need any new competitive advantages."

4K is becoming table stakes for high- and mid-tier smartphones, said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.

"It's what people are coming to expect when they plunk down nearly (US)$1,000 for a phone, so handsets that don't support 4K will increasingly stand out as second rate," he told TechNewsWorld.

coppied by TechNewsWorld

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