Here's Everything Facebook Announced at F8, From VR to Bots

Augmented reality, Messenger upgrades, and more.
Mark Zuckerberg Delivers Keynote Address At Facebook F8 Conference
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Key Speakers At The F8 Facebook Developer Conference
The Camera Is Everything
Facebook was pretty clear about one thing in the F8 keynote: the camera is now the most important thing on your phone. Sharing photos and videos with your friends will continue to be huge, sure. But soon the camera will begin powering new augmented reality experiences inside Facebook. You'll get games and photo filters, and your surroundings will soon be awash in playful and informational metadata that you can only see by lifting up your handset, opening the Facebook app, and viewing the world through the camera.
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VR Gets Social
Social VR comes to life with the new Facebook Spaces, a virtual reality app that lets you (or, really, a cartoonish avatar of yourself) hang out with friends inside your headset. What you *do* in this virtual world remains to be seen. Throw a birthday party and draw 3-D party hats on your guests? Visit the International Space Station and take selfies from orbit? The app launches today as a beta. Build whatever kind of weird, virtual world you want—as long as you have the requisite Oculus gear. Also read Peter Rubin’s [Spaces story](https://slim-weight.info/2017/04/facebook-spaces-vr-for-your-friends/%29.%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="ProductSummaryGridOfferWrapper-ddvMbY kkFjAO">Read more
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Music and Games in Messenger
Move aside, WhatsApp. Facebook’s making Messenger *the* place to talk to your friends. New integrations bring games and music into the platform so you can share the latest Chainsmokers song or launch a *Words With Friends* match—without ever closing your chat window. The full potential depends on what developers bring to the table, but for now, Messenger is synced up with Spotify and promised an integration with Apple Music soon.
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AR Will Be Huge
Facebook's new augmented reality tools will let you place virtual objects into the real world when you view your surroundings through your phone. Leave messages on the fridge for your spouse, or tag businesses with floating notes and tips written on walls. We'll get AR games that incorporate real-world objects thanks to a technology called "SLAM" (simultaneous localization and mapping) that lays a 3-D grid over the table in front of you, turning it into a gameboard. Also, we'll get AR art, pieces only viewable through your phone. As Zuckerberg said, "This is going to be a thing in the future—people standing around looking at blank walls."