Facebook '2G Tuesdays' to Slow Down Internet for Employees

Facebook has been continuously working towards improving the overall experience of 

browsing on the social platform on slow Internet connections. Earlier this month, the 

company updated its News Feed making it easier to load content on 2G connections.


Now, Facebook has announced an internal initiative called "2G Tuesdays" that will help employees better understand how 
hard it is to use the social platform on slow Internet connections, like the kind prevalent in India and other emerging markets. Announcing 
the news, Product Manager Chris Marra in a blog post explained the whole idea behind 2G Tuesdays.
"People are coming online at a fast rate in emerging markets. In most cases, they are doing so on mobile via 2G connections. 
But on a typical 2G network, it can take several minutes to download a webpage. That doesn't make for a great experience when 
sharing content with friends and family. To build for a global audience like ours, we know that we need to design features that work seamlessly even on a 2G network," Marra said.
Under Facebook's 2G Tuesdays, employees will have to use the social platform as well as other related apps such as 
Messenger on slow Internet connection. Notably, the new initiative has an opt-in option and employees will only have the slow 
Internet connection for an hour.
"We're taking another step toward better understanding by implementing '2G Tuesdays' for Facebook employees. On Tuesdays employees will get a pop-up that gives them the option to simulate a 2G connection. We hope this will help us understand how people with 2G connectivity use our product, so we can address issues and pain points in future builds," added Marra.
Detailing how the new initiative will work, Tom Alison, Facebook's Director of Engineering, told Business Insider, "For that 
next hour, their experience on Facebook will be very much like the experience that millions of people around the world have on Facebook 
on a 2G connection. They're going to see the places that we need to improve our product, but they're also going to see the places 
where we have made a lot of progress."
Facebook back in June had rolled out a new Android app called Facebook Lite, which was available in countries across Asia 
and was also planned to roll out in parts of Latin America, Africa and Europe.

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