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NintendoPie said:
Adinnieken said:

Someone that I know who was in high school, barely had any Facebook friends and he couldn't fathom why anyone would or could have that many.  I assured him, once he graduated things would change.  They did, especially when he entered university.  Even more so when he became the editor of the school newpaper and a music critic.

Facebook becomes a way of reconnecting with people you borderline dislike, but still want to see how they're doing in life.   Not to mention the people you do like and are your friends.  Oh and family. 

I doubt many people have over 2'000 (maybe even 1'000) people they would actually call friends. 

FaceBook is not a good example any way you look at it. Unless you have a big family and a lot of them have FB accounts...

I'm not arguing whether Facebook is a good example of who are or aren't friends. 

If you have Skype, and you connect Skype to Facebook, all your Facebook contacts become Skype contacts.
Now, if you have an Xbox One, and you use Skype with the same account you use for Skype, all those contacts will be part of your Friends on Xbox One. 

I don't believe there will be a distinction between Xbox One contact types and Friends on your friends list.  You'll be able to group them, like on Skype, but those groups could have a mesh of Windows Messenger users (if you have them still), Xbox LIVE gamers, Skype contacts, e-mail contacts, and Facebook contacts as well as other integrated services.