FP TrendingNov 20, 2020 13:41:51 IST
Major social media platform Facebook has launched its experimental E.gg app recently. Currently, only available in the US, Facebook is marketing the application as “a platform for freeform creative expression”. It is available for download via Apple App Store as the product is only for iOS users. Facebook says users will be able to live in the nostalgia of the old internet through E.gg and give wings to their creativity. Users can curate webpages on their phones and then share them on the web.
“With E.gg, you can curate images, gifs, shapes and text onto freeform canvases to express who you are and what you love,” says a company blog. The post says that users who had used the beta version of the app have created pages for recipes, collages, fan pages, guides, tributes and profiles on E.gg.
In order to get started, users need to choose their own URL, then fit images, text, GIFs and other interactive material onto freeform canvases, and finally share it across the web. As a unique URL is being created, users who do not have the E.gg app can also view your creation.
In the app, users will be able to browse through other users’ curation and take elements if they are desirable. The app is experimental in nature and thus can undergo changes. It was created by the New Product Experimentation (NPE) team at Facebook.
The team behind E.gg had launched the beta version of the app way back in July, urging users to create something new and innovative that freely expresses them.
New! Introducing https://t.co/q199YM7REf, an experimental new platform for weird and wonderful expressions of who you are and what you love pic.twitter.com/kQldJeXB6h
— Jason Toff (@jasontoff) July 28, 2020
The About page of the E.gg gives more insight into the vision of the product. The creators batted for the “weird and enlivening bazaar of manically-blinking GIFs, passionate guestbook entries [and] personal web pages”. A note at the end of the page mentions that they went with the nostalgic look but they do not wish to “create a 90s-throwback platform”.
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