REVIEW: The Facebook Phone

htc first menu
htc first menu

Steve Kovach/Business Insider

You can argue about technicalities all you want, but the HTC First is the first real Facebook phone.

Yes, it's pretty much just an Android phone with a Facebook layer on top. And yes, the hardware is built by HTC, not Facebook.

But this is our first taste of Facebook's true vision for mobile, one where it wants to give you the ability to turn any phone into a Facebook phone.

The HTC First just happens to be the first device to ship with that experience right out of the box.

Click here for hands-on photos of the HTC First and Facebook Home >

First things first: What is Facebook Home?

Facebook Home is an Android app that acts a bit differently than the regular smartphone apps you're used to. You can install it on several Android phones like the Galaxy S III and HTC One, but the HTC First is the only phone available that ships with Facebook Home running right out of the box.

It's best to think of Facebook Home as a wrapper for Android that replaces your home screen with a visual slide show of photos and status updates from your Facebook friends. It's called Cover Feed, and it hides your other apps and Google services beneath all that Facebook stuff.

The other main component of Facebook Home is a messaging product called Chat Heads that syncs with your Facebook messages and regular text messages. Chat Heads let you receive and respond to messages on top of any app you're using. (It's an awesome feature, but more on that in a bit).

The rest of Android sits beneath Facebook Home, so all your apps and other services are hidden in a separate app menu, not on the regular home screen like you see on most phones.

Using Facebook Home

So what happens when you have no control over what appears on your phone's home screen?

It becomes a mess.

With Cover Feed, you're a slave to whatever your friends decide to post on Facebook at that moment. On Monday, for example, my HTC First was full of depressing news, commentary, and photos related to the bombings at the Boston marathon.

Later in the week, it was all selfies and photos of my friends' breakfasts.

By Friday, it was back to Boston and the manhunt for the bombing suspects.

But I do see the value in Cover Feed. It turns your phone into a reflection of what's happening at the moment, whether it's good, bad, violent, or completely inane. That's probably really useful for some people, especially those who are already obsessed with Facebook.

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Cover Feed also encourages you to engage a lot more with your Facebook friends. I'm not a heavy Facebook user, but I did find myself getting sucked in a lot more than usual, liking and commenting on status updates and photos from my friends just because all that stuff was sitting in front of me on the home screen.