Facebook F8 Developer Conference 2015 To Be A Two-Day Affair In March 2015

Facebook's F8 Developer Conference has been extended and will be held for two days come March 2015 due to numerous upcoming announcements from the social media giant, Tech Radar reported.

The F8 Developer Conference 2015 has now been set for Mar. 25 to 26, 2015 and will be held at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco.

To announce the new dates, Facebook sent out Save the Date notes, declaring that Facebook's developer community is getting bigger and bigger and with that they decided they needed one more day to address everything that needs to be talked about.

"The scope of the company's products has broadened, and there's more content to share than can fit into a single day," the announcement read. "The additional day means double the number of technical sessions, products demos and onsite experiences for Facebook's growing developer community."

The announcements also added interested attendees will be able to register sometime in early 2015 when they send out the details.

Facebook's F8 Developer Conference came back to life in early 2014 at the Concourse Center, and before then was last held in 2011 at the same venue, according to Tech Crunch.

Not only is the company deciding to continue on the tradition to next year, but this will also be the first time they're holding a two-day F8 event. CEO Mark Zuckerberg also claimed that the F8 conference will now become an annual event instead of being held every few years.

The F8, which is similar to Google's Google I/O developer conference, is usually filled with a keynote panel full of news, info sessions, hands-on demos of the new tools for developers and more.

The previous F8 was filled with announcements on the anonymous login feature, Audience Network mobile ad, the Like button for mobiles, an announcement on the reduction of data that a user can access from another user and more.

It's unknown what are the topics for next year's event, and given the previous F8, developers and interested parties can only imagine what Facebook has in store next.