The Sunday Guardian

Facebook knows how slowly you read

- ANDREW GRIFFIN

Facebook has tweaked its news feed so that stories that users read for longer — but don’t necessaril­y share, like or comment on — will show up higher.

The app will now watch for when people spend “significan­tly more time on a particular story in News Feed than the majority of other stories they look at”, and promote that up the news feed. It is an attempt to promote things that don’t necessaril­y get shared, the site said.

The algorithm that chooses what shows up in Facebook’s timeline has historical­ly relied on liking, commenting and sharing among other factors. But research showed that users were seeing mean- ingful stories on the site but didn’t necessaril­y feel they could like or comment on it — such as informatio­n about a serious current event — and that should be promoted higher up.

In a blog post outlining the changes, Facebook software engineers pointed out that a user might be flicking through their feed and like a photo of a graduation, share a funny picture, but then dwell over a long post by someone detailing a recent trip. The fact that a user read the story in didn’t count in the news feed’s calculatio­n, so the first two activities would be promoted higher — but now they will.

The site said that it will compare the reading time with normal, so that the effect of a slow connection or a slower reading speed won’t lead to things showing up when they shouldn’t.

The site is rolling the change out already and will continue to do so in the coming weeks. Stories from Facebook Pages won’t see a significan­t hit to their traffic, the site said. THE INDEPENDEN­T The Nexían Chromebook is a laptop that runs Chrome OS. Chrome OS is basically Google Chrome with a host of offline features. Working on a Chromebook without internet access means you’ll be restricted to the inbuilt tools for playing video, music and creating documents. And if you’re open to experiment­ing, the experience can be quite clean and zippy. Because the hardware isn’t running anything heavier than a browser, everything opens at the speed of clicks. We have failed to notice any lag so far. No issues with drivers or tools to run a particular format. The OS is

But when you’re connected to the internet, the Chromebook can even run Microsoft Office through Dropbox or OneDrive integratio­n. And

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