Skip to main content

Facebook Messenger for Mobile

Facebook Messenger is an official Facebook app for iPhone and Android. It will be usefull to send and receive messages directly to your friends on their mobile phones.


Messages are delivered through notifications and texts. You can use Messenger to send messages to phone contacts by just typing your contact name.
 You can get it at https://www.facebook.com/mobile/messenger  or by searching your phone's app store.
With this app you can send group messages, add your current location and you can also attach photos.

Note: If yo can't find the app at app store, check back after some time. 


Popular posts from this blog

Google Chrome 0154.3 Google Chrome is a browser that combines a minimal design with sophisticated technology to make the web faster, safer, and easier. Read more Microsoft Joins with Google To Favor White Space The debate about using white spaces in the television spectrum white space is getting red-hot as a Nov. 4 vote by the Federal Communications Commission grows closer. As further proof that telecommunications policy makes strange bedfellows, Microsoft has joined Google in urging the FCC to allow white space to be used for a national wireless broadband. In a telephone conference with reporters Monday morning, Microsoft chief research and strategy officer Craig Mundie said the software giant agrees with Google that using the white space could make the United States a world leader in broadband access, particularly in rural areas. "As we look to rural communities, we'll see more community broadband connectivity," Mundie said. "Using unlicensed white-space spectrum,...

One Year of Microsoft Security Essentials

The free Antivirus from Microsoft celebrates its first birth day with more than 30 million installations in 74 countries in 25 languages. During this year MSE detected over 400 million threats among 366 million threats were already removed by users. And bellow are the words from Eric Foster  About this Successful  first year.

Robotic insects first controlled flight

Researchers from Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences shown the first controlled flight of Robotic insects. They are half the size of a paper clip, weighing less than a tenth of a gram, the robot was inspired by the biology of a fly, with submillimeter-scale anatomy and two wafer-thin wings that flap almost invisibly  120 times per second.