Two days of Facebook’s F8 Conference have come and gone, so here’s a look back at all the things you may have missed from the event.

F8 is a Developer Conference that Facebook hosts to share product developments while showcasing opportunities and networking for the technology industry.

Mark Zuckerberg kicks off the event… with a Trump takedown

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Zuckerberg also shared a 10-year roadmap for the company that basically consists of lasers, Virtual Reality, and bots. Zuck foresees the company making VR headsets small enough to look like ordinary glasses.

But before this all takes place, it’s important for Facebook to connect the world to the Web, and it’s doing so with a variety of projects such as drones and antennas. It plans to test in developing countries and smaller cities before implementing them on larger scales should they prove successful.

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The roadmap seemed more like a preview of this F8 than the future, but it’s interesting to think about what exactly Facebook might be building 10 years from now that aren’t those three things.

Some new Facebook tools

Moving over to some developer updates, Facebook announced a handful of new tools to make navigating the Web more intuitive. Such tools include an Account Kit so you can log into any service with just your phone number or email, a quote sharing tool, and a Save to Facebook button for any website to implement.

There are also updates to Analytics for Apps which aims to help developers gain more understanding of their users’ demographics, such as their age range and what time they tend to make in-app purchases. They can also target notifications to these users for higher engagement rates.

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In React news, Facebook said its framework will now be available on Windows and Samsung devices, allowing developers to create apps for smart TV, wearables, and gaming consoles.

Facebook knows it needs partnerships to continue growing, and swiftly announced a new selfie kit that includes six beta partners to help users spice up their profile videos. It’s also got a new live video API so more people can choose its platform over, say, Periscope, to better brand and extend reach.

Messenger takes center stage

And while those developer tools were useful updates, it was clear the star of the show this year was Facebook Messenger. The company unveiled Messenger Platform which lets anyone create bots for the app, and launched a few for users to try on the spot.

messenger platform

If you need help creating a bot, there’s also a Bot Engine based on Facebook M, an artificial intelligence program Facebook unveiled last year. Facebook foresees this future being more about how people can interact with businesses more intuitively, and use bots to make their lives easier – be it to order pizza, arrange a car pickup, send flowers, or go shopping.

For example, you can interact with the CNN bot on Facebook Messenger and tell it topics you are interested in. In return, the bot can provide you with a news story you might have missed, or provide a digest of things worth your time.

It makes you wonder what Facebook will look like in that 10-year roadmap if everything you can do on the app will soon be available directly on Messenger.

VR demos and a $30,000 360-degree camera

While hardware was never Facebook’s forte, it did unveil a $30,000 camera design that can shoot 8K videos in 360-degrees. Facebook is open-sourcing the concept based on existing hardware, and while it’s not clear who the company designed this for, the price seems a lot less expensive on other cameras on the market with similar capabilities.

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It also showed off a cute demonstration of what it foresees VR doing, such as a tour of global destinations and the ability to take VR selfies via Oculus. It’s not super practical, but it does seem rather fun to do if you’re trying to impress someone with your Oculus Kit — assuming you receive them in time.