Facebook is working on a video chat device for the home

Device is set to be the first major hardware product from its experimental Building 8 lab

Testing Facebook servers at the company’s hardware labs in Menlo Park, California. A new Facebook device could be announced as soon as next spring’s F8 developer conference. Photograph: David Paul Morris/Getty Images
Testing Facebook servers at the company’s hardware labs in Menlo Park, California. A new Facebook device could be announced as soon as next spring’s F8 developer conference. Photograph: David Paul Morris/Getty Images

Facebook is working on a video chat device for the home – the first major hardware product from its experimental Building 8 lab.

Featuring a laptop-sized touchscreen, the device represents a new product category and could be announced as soon as next spring’s F8 developer conference, according to people familiar with the matter. They say the large screen and smart camera technology could help far-flung people feel like they’re in the same room, which aligns with chief executive Mark Zuckerberg’s mission of bringing Facebook users closer together. The device is in the prototype phase but is already being tested in people’s homes.

The social media giant is working on at least one other product – a standalone smart speaker that would compete with the Amazon Echo and Google Home, said the people, who asked not be named discussing unannounced products. Facebook is hiring Apple veterans to help it create a Siri-style voice assistant that would run on both devices, they said.

The new devices represent a new phase in Facebook’s hardware ambitions. Though the company sells the Oculus virtual reality headset, it acquired its maker and didn’t create the original product (although a new model will debut next year). Last year, the Building 8 lab was set up to help Facebook develop its own hardware and keep consumers locked into its ecosystem – the news feed, Facebook live, video calling and more.

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Hardware veterans

Building 8 is staffed with hardware veterans and led by former Google executive Regina Dugan. Speaking at the most recent F8 conference in April, Dugan said the goal was to "create and ship new, category-defining consumer products that are social first." She spoke about how technology has made it easier to connect, but also has confined people to their phones so that they don't interact with the physical world as much.

“I’m optimistic that technology can help, that new hardware platforms can chip away at false choices,” Dugan said, explaining how her relationship with her mother was improved through daily phone calls on her way to a coffee shop. “If we fail it’s gonna suck.”

Geared to the living room, the video chat device will feature a wide-angle camera lens, microphones and speakers that are all powered by artificial intelligence to boost performance, the people said. A version of the device in testing includes a thin, vertical stand that holds a large touchscreen measuring between 13 and 15 inches diagonally, the people said. Facebook has considered running a version of the Android operating system on its device instead of building its own core operating system, according to the people.

Ha Thai, a spokeswoman for Building 8, declined to comment.

Facebook is testing a feature that would allow the camera to automatically scan for people in its range and lock onto them, one of the people said. For example, the camera could zoom onto a painting that a child brought home from school to show to a parent away on a business trip. Facebook has also been developing a 360-degree camera for the device, but people familiar with the matter say it’s unlikely to be ready in time for the initial launch.

Early plans call for the standalone speaker to sell in the low €80 range, undercutting the competition, while the technologically more complex video chat device would cost a few hundred euro, one of the people said. Because the speaker concept has already been popularised, Facebook could abandon it and prioritise the video chat device instead.

– (Bloomberg)