Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Social Media
  5. Web
  6. News

Facebook Messenger now lets businesses show off products in augmented reality

Add as a preferred source on Google

Facebook Messenger is getting better. As expected, Facebook announced a few updates to its messaging platform at F8 2018, including improvements to M, its digital assistant, and new ways for businesses to engage with customers through augmented reality.

Here’s what you need to know about the new features in Facebook Messenger.

Recommended Videos

AR in Messenger

Perhaps the most important new feature is augmented reality in Messenger — and it could seriously bring AR to the masses. The feature is aimed at businesses that might want to incorporate augmented reality into their Messenger experiences. For example, when a customer interacts with a business in Messenger, the business can prompt the customer to open their camera, after which they’ll see different filters and AR effects, depending on what the business wants to show.

This could be important for a number of different situations where visualizing a product is important. For example, you may want to see how furniture looks in your house before you actually buy it. A few brands will support the feature at launch — Asus, Kia, Nike, and Sephora. With Asus, you’ll be able to get a deeper look at a phone’s features, while Kia allows you to better see how the Kia Stinger looks up close, and even customize the car’s features. Sephora, as you might expect, allows you to try out different looks and styles.

M translations

Facebook is also working to improve Facebook M, the digital assistant that lives within Facebook Messenger. Namely, the assistant will now be able to help with translations for businesses who want to reach customers in other regions. Now, buyers and sellers in Marketplace can communicate with people who don’t speak their language. In other words, if users in Marketplace get a message that’s in a language other than their default language, they’ll be asked if they want that language translated.

Facebook says it also plans on expanding the feature to Messenger users in the U.S. in coming weeks — so keep an eye out for it.

The two new features certainly seem to be largely business-focused, but hopefully they’ll make checking out products and interacting with businesses a bit easier.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
OxygenOS made OnePlus phones special. Now, it might go away forever
The Android skin that defined what a clean, fast phone could be is officially ending. ColorOS is what comes next.
Person holding OnePlus 15.

If you bought a OnePlus because of OxygenOS, for the relatively clean, fast, and actually-useful Android experience, your phone may be the last one to get it. 

According to a report from the Indian outlet Smartprix, OxygenOS and Realme UI are both reportedly being phased out. If accurate, everything would move to ColorOS, the skin atop Android on Oppo smartphones, globally, across all three brands.

Read more
This flower identification app turns every walk into Pokémon Go for plants
flormie lets iPhone users scan flowers, save them as collectibles, and build a calmer kind of real-world collection game.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

A new flower identification app wants daily walks to feel a little more like Pokémon Go, only with fewer raids and far less public phone shouting.

flormie is an iPhone app built around a simple loop. Find a flower outside, scan it, and add it to a growing collection. That turns a normal walk into a low-pressure nature hunt, without pretending every sidewalk needs battle mechanics.

Read more
Your iPhone will soon warn you before you fall for a scam
iOS 27's new Trust Insights system watches for signs of coercion during calls, texts, and email to help users avoid scams.
iOS 27 Trust Insights featured

Apple is introducing a new anti-fraud system with iOS 27 that's designed to catch scam attempts in real time. The framework, called Trust Insights, monitors user behavior during calls, text conversations, or email exchanges and can trigger a warning or add a verification step if it detects signs of manipulation.

How Trust Insights works

Read more