Facebook App Center goes live for mobile users
Facebook officially launched its App Center this week, amid a smattering of good news from Wall Street.
The Facebook homepage.
Reuters
Earlier this week, Facebook took the wraps off the App Center, an online store in the mold of the Apple App Store or Google Play. App Center launches with approximately 600 applications, including software from Pinterest, Draw Something, Nike, and game company Ubisoft, which is offering a mobile Facebook version of its popular Ghost Recon franchise. The platform is accessible now through iOS or Android-equipped devices.
Skip to next paragraphRecent posts
-
05.02.13
UK loophole: Why your Facebook photos may show up on a billboard -
05.02.13
Has Facebook figured out smart phones? Wall Street thinks so. -
05.01.13
Nearly 2,000 Netflix movies to disappear overnight -
04.19.13
Reddit slammed by massive online attack -
04.18.13
Google Glass guidelines: No ads, for now. No charging money, for now.
Subscribe Today to the Monitor
So how does it stack up? Well, over at PC World, Ian Paul notes that App Center isn't necessarily a replacement for other app stores, but a kind of funnel. Using the platform, you can find games to play on Facebook.com, track down iOS or Android apps that require a Facebook log-in, or filter through game and app requests. And in those ways, Paul continues, the App Center will almost certainly be a success for users.
RELATED: 10 best Facebook apps and games
"App Center may be able to surface some good content for you since Facebook knows so much about your preferences and can share with you which apps your friends are using," he writes.
The App Center may also be a success for Facebook, which went public last month. The App Center, after all, does what Facebook products do best: keeps users connected to the larger Facebook eco-system. "Facebook is clearly hoping that it can use its strength to increase the popularity of apps that use Facebook in some way, which increases Facebook’s popularity, and so on in a positive feedback loop," writes Dieter Bohn of The Verge.
In related news, after weeks of bad news from Wall Street, Facebook stock crept upward today. The Associated Press reports that shares of the social network climbed 73 cents in trading on Friday, up to $27.04. That's still 29 percent off the initial offering price of $38, but probably a welcome reprieve for CEO Mark Zuckerberg and the rest of the Menlo Park crew.
For more tech news, follow us on Twitter @venturenaut.
RELATED: 10 best Facebook apps and games









These comments are not screened before publication. Constructive debate about the above story is welcome, but personal attacks are not. Please do not post comments that are commercial in nature or that violate any copyright[s]. Comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence will be removed. If you find a comment offensive, you may flag it.