London is Facebook's top network
By Simon Aughton
Posted on 23 Jul 2007 at 12:19
London has usurped Toronto as Facebook's most popular network. More than 750,000 people have joined the network, almost half of them since May.
The web phenomenon of 2007 recently signed up its 30 millionth member, 790,615 of which admit to some kind of affiliation with the UK capital. The UK has 2.1 million Facebook users.
Facebook said it could find no specific reason for the popularity of London, noting only that the growth of the network matches "overall pattern of growing exponentially".
Part of Facebook's appeal are the plethora of third-party "applications" that developers have plugged into it. They range from the banal - such as virtual food fights - to the cerebral - online Scrabble - but have allowed the site to grow without having to make expensive acquisitions.
Last week Facebook announced its first purchase, Parakey. The company, founded recently by former Firefox engineers Blake Ross and Joe Hewitt, is developing a platform for building web-style applications that run offline - a kind of web-based operating system.
Whether Facebook survives long enough to put that into practice remains to be seen. What is fashionable one year may not be quite so compelling several months down the line. And it may yet be shutdown if it fails to win a US court battle this week over exactly who came up with the idea - and the code - for the site.
From around the web
advertisement
- Laptop bag reviews: nine tested
- Sony VAIO T Series Ultrabook review: first look
- Revealed: the military standards and robots HP uses to test its laptops
- Windows 8: multi-monitors and double standards?
- Why is TalkTalk's year-old porn filter suddenly big news?
- Why are laptop screens so far behind mobiles?
- HP EliteBook Folio review: first look
- The shoebox-sized all-in-one printer
- Forget the Ultrabook: here comes the HP Sleekbook
- HP Spectre XT review: first look
- Why you have to be left in the dark on OS patches
- Is Microsoft mismanaging Windows on ARM?
- Dealing with spam surrogates
- Why 3G broadband can be better and cheaper than ADSL
- Is Twitter bad for business?
- Publishing your email address isn't a security disaster
- Why you'll need a fax machine to develop iOS apps
- Learning to adapt to the mobile web
- Why you shouldn't use WPS on your Wi-Fi network
- Disabled users suffer when software breaks the rules
advertisement
