Valentina Zarya writes at Fortune Magazine that the top 2016 prediction for David Marcus,Facebook's vice president of messaging products, is the disappearance of the phone number and its replacement by applications like Facebook's Messenger. " You can make video and voice calls while at the same time not needing to know someone's phone number," writes Marcus. "You don't need to have a Facebook account to use Messenger anymore, and it's also a cross platform experience – so you can pick up where you left off whether you're on a desktop computer, a tablet, or your phone."
Jonah Berger, Wharton professor and author of "Contagious: Why Things Catch On" agrees. "For most of us, I think it's really hard to actually remember what someone's phone number actually is. We use our phones so often or we click on a button that has it. But if there was a test where you had to say, do you remember your best friends number or could you type in your best friend's number I think most of us would fail."
But not everyone agrees that Murcus' predictions are objective and disinterested. "It's all very well the company wanting to be the de facto Internet -- especially in places like India. But drier minds and eyes might wonder whether the wish to eradicate phone numbers has something to do with not everyone having yet given Facebook their phone numbers," says Chris Matyszczyk. "It may well be that phone numbers will disappear. Some, though, might wonder how making their disappearance a company theme squares with what Marcus claims is the ultimate goal: 'It's all about delight.' This one's easy. It's all about delighting Facebook."
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 14 2016, @04:11PM
In fact the number will stick around for a *long* time. It is basically the routing tag. Which funny enough with cell phones is just to look up another routing number.
Services like what this guy talks about will 'hide' it nicely for you. Much like DNS hides IPs from us.
Go away? Not so much.
(Score: 2) by bob_super on Thursday January 14 2016, @04:40PM
If phones numbers were going to go away, it would have been to be replaced by the somewhat similar and simple IPv4.
Try to get an IPv6 number from/to the drunk girl at the bar...