March 17, 2009 4:00 AM PDT

20 Facebook desktop apps to try

by Don Reisinger
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A lot is happening on Facebook. Not only are your friends telling the world what's going on in their lives, but the social network itself is changing. It's more open now than before, thanks to the Facebook Connect program, and there are several good products that let you see Facebook data in new ways. You don't have to use Facebook.com to use Facebook anymore. Here are some of the best desktop applications.

The newbies: AIR apps

Seesmic for Facebook
An Adobe AIR app, Seesmic for Facebook (news) uses Facebook Connect to let you update your status and view friend status updates without surfing to the Facebook site. It's in beta testing, but it works as advertised: updating status is quick and easy, and whenever a friend updates their own status, it's there for me to see. It's a little buggy, but it was just released.

TweetDeck
TweetDeck is one of the most popular Twitter desktop clients, and now the app's developers are vying for Facebook dominance too. The upcoming version of TweetDeck lets you send a message just to Twitter, just to Facebook, or to both simultaneously. Once installed, the new version also includes a column displaying friends' status updates, and it offers the ability to chat with them via Facebook chat directly. The app isn't available to everyone just yet, but its public release is right around the corner.

Windows Apps

Facebook Desktop
A Windows-only app, Facebook Desktop provides real-time updates, lets you see wall posts, view messages, and read friend requests. It's one of the best-looking apps, too.

Facebook Photo Uploader
The folks at the Google Code Base have a neat little desktop app for Windows users that allows them to upload photos directly to Facebook and tag them before they get to the service. It's not the best-looking app, and it's a little buggy, but I'm impressed by its ease of use.

Facebook

Lightweight and unobtrusive makes Tray a great app.

(Credit: Facebook)

Facebook Tray Notify
Sometimes, a desktop client just gets in the way. If you feel that way, turn to Facebook TrayNotify. It's a lightweight app that sits in your taskbar awaiting Facebook notifications. Once it receives them, alerts pop up, letting you know about the updates. If you want to act on them, you'll need to go to the Facebook site to do so.

FBLook
FBLook is useful, if you're an Outlook user. Besides filling you in on friends' status updates, you can update your own Facebook status, and see notifications and requests without going to the Facebook Web site--it all works within Outlook on your desktop. Although I'm running a Mac every day, I still use FBLook whenever I run my Windows machine. In fact, it's one of the first apps I fire up.

FBQuick
If you're looking for a nicely designed app that will work on your Windows PC and give you some of the best functionality around, look at FBQuick. The app sends you profile notifications, including tagged photos, pokes, and messages, but it doesn't allow you to update anything while on your desktop.

Fonebook
If you're an Outlook user, and you have a mobile phone that supports Outlook, check out the Fonebook app. Once installed on your desktop, the app will transfer your contacts and photos from Facebook to Outlook. The app copies a contact's photo, Facebook profile URL, the "About me" details, and status. That can then be synced with an Outlook-compatible phone so whenever someone calls, the person's picture and information will pop up on your mobile-phone screen.

Mac Apps

Dashboard Widget
Dashboard Widget gives you Facebook on your OS X Dashboard. It will display messages, pokes, friend requests, group invites, and other notifications. It updates whenever new notifications filter in.

Facebook iPhoto

Exporter for iPhoto couldn't be easier to use.

(Credit: Facebook)

Facebook Exporter for iPhoto
If you want to upload photos into Facebook, and you don't want to waste your time firing up Safari, use the Facebook Exporter for iPhoto. It's the best photo-uploading service for Macs. It allows you to find photos in iPhoto, tag them with your friends' names, add captions, and upload them as an album to your profile. It's incredibly easy to use.

FacebookSync
If you're an Address Book user, FacebookSync will automatically sync information from Facebook into your Apple Address Book. The service finds matches in your friends list and adds all their information, including name, address, phone number, and other data to your Address Book. It even adds their photos to the app.

Facile
If you simply want to update your status update or view all your friends' status updates, Facile for the Mac is a nice way to do it. It provides a simple interface showing your friends' profile pictures and latest status updates, and allows you to input your own updates above the list (it's a lot like Seesmic for Facebook).

FriendSaver
This is a Facebook screensaver. It finds your friends tagged in photos and starts displaying those in succession while your Mac is dormant. And if you want to take some friends out of the queue, you can filter them out with a simple click. Or just display your male or female friends.

PhotoBook
A Facebook photo browser for your Mac, PhotoBook allows you to manage, share, and view your friends' Facebook photos without ever going to their profile pages. All the photos are available on a single page, and they can be viewed by tags or in a slideshow. Every photo or album can be downloaded into iPhoto.

The others

Bloom Facebook

Bloom makes it easy to add images.

(Credit: Facebook)

Bloom
Bloom, available for Mac, Windows, and Linux, allows you to upload photos, download other albums, and view your friends' photos without surfing to Facebook pages. A recent update allows you to add captions to images, rotate them before you upload, and tag different people. It has a simple drag-and-drop interface.

Drag-and-Drop Uploader
If you don't want all the extras that Bloom provides, Drag-and-Drop Uploader (for Windows) makes it simple to add images to your Facebook profile. The service is lightweight, and in a matter of seconds, you can drag photos from your desktop and add them to the app, which will then be uploaded into albums in your profile.

DeskBook
The Windows app DeskBook allows you to access Facebook features and information without accessing your profile page. Regardless of whether you want to see how many notes you've received, how many friend requests you've ignored, or if you want to just search for friends, DeskBook does it all. It even lets you accept or reject group and event invitations, as well as friend requests. It's my go-to app when I want to get the full Facebook experience without going to my profile page.

Facedesk
There's not much to Facedesk, but that is its appeal. The app can be downloaded to your desktop, and it runs Facebook directly in the app instead of your browser. Yes, it acts like a browser, but it runs only Facebook, so you won't be able to open any other sites. It's Facebook for people who care about nothing else in the world.

Flair
Flair's functionality won't blow you away--it's a notification app that lets you know when a friend wants to add you, or you receive a poke--but it does that in a lightweight bundle that doesn't hog resources, and it offers one of the best designs of any app in this roundup. It's not unique, but it sure is pretty.

Zebr
AIR app Zebr allows you to update your status without going to your profile page, and it keeps track of your friends' status automatically.

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) (14 Comments)
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by Hep Cat March 17, 2009 4:44 AM PDT
I don't trust people who don't smile for their pictures, Don.
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by j_ten_man March 17, 2009 4:58 AM PDT
I use Digsby for chatting on Facebook and getting all of my updates while using it for all of my other chat clients. I personally don't see the point of a completely separate app to do this. My computer has enough running on it already.
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by waegookin March 17, 2009 8:48 AM PDT
I use Digsby as well. It shows a basic news feed from your friends and lets you post status updates. It also notifies of messages and friend invites.
by yon2501 March 17, 2009 7:20 AM PDT
There's also a facebook chat plug in for pidgin if you just want to chat up people, it doesn't let you set your status or post anything, but its good if you just want to chat up your friends.
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by sythara March 17, 2009 7:54 AM PDT
Just what you need, put a facebook app on your desktop tray. Doesent that open up potential vulnerabilities?
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by cfbandit March 17, 2009 8:51 AM PDT
Are there any apps that allow you to share pictures in facebook chat? That's the one thing that annoys me about facebook. I either have to upload a photo or email someone while I'm trying to chat with them and it takes away from the conversation. Google Talk has the ability but not everyone I know has it - especially not on their mobiles.
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by christopherichard March 17, 2009 12:01 PM PDT
You can try scrapboy or sobees as well. I am not sure of the advantage of running a desktop application instead of running a web browser (which is a desk top application).
I would rather recommend Flock or Firefox add-ons Yoono or Facebook sidebar + fotofox. I means using Firefox though.
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by TV James March 17, 2009 1:16 PM PDT
You forgot Digsby! With Digsby I'm simultaneously signed in to Yahoo! Messenger, MSN Messenger, AIM, Facebook Chat and Google Talk. And it's also monitoring my 10 inboxes for me on Google, Google Apps, Hotmail, Yahoo, Linked In, MySpace and Yahoo as well as providing me status updates on my friends from Twitter, Facebook and MySpace. (And I'm not even using all of Digsby's functionality.) It doesn't completely replace going to the Facebook website, but it helps me to keep tabs while visiting the site less frequently.
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by fwpeteo March 18, 2009 2:21 AM PDT
Another vote for Digsby. The less apps running on my machine, the better. Nice list though.
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by tmack6849 March 18, 2009 5:03 PM PDT
You guys are great at keeping me updated on everything from software to tech toys. Best site on the web. Keep up the great work and thanks.

TM
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by moneyinthebizank March 18, 2009 9:03 PM PDT
So like hey, let's make Facebook suck. Everybody complains. And then, we come out with this thing to make Facebook everybody's desktop. Then, we won't even have to get them to come to Facebook any more. We'll be on their desktop... I mean, yaaayy now you don't have to go to that wack @$$ Facebook on the internet that everybody hates!!! woot.
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by robjbyrne March 25, 2009 9:25 PM PDT
fmenu app security problem...i think...?

I have encountered a problem using the popular fmenu app for facebook on Macs. I like to use shortcuts, online pages with command- L, which is the same as log-out for fmenu. As long as the f logo is present on my computer, my passwords for emails are sometimes disabled, primarily hotmail. If i enter my command-L page as hotmail, the sign-in sheet will sometimes bypass directly to my active mail in box. Sometimes, it requires entering hotmail.com. In either case, this is unsettling. Is there something to correct this prob? Have you encountered this? Please let me know, because I like to have the ability to see facebook without constantly opening and closing it.

Sincerely,

Rob Byrne
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by smilin_happy April 6, 2009 5:45 PM PDT
I include Status King (http://statusking.net) on my top Facebook application list. It encourages me in status update cleverness--it's always nice to have my friends think I'm funny. I haven't connected all my status updates into one yet, I'll have to try one of your suggestions.
Thanks!
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by MM000 November 20, 2009 5:28 PM PST
I personally like Microsofts FishBowl facebook client!!!!

http://www.fishbowlclient.com/
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