I've not always been happy about the changes Facebook has made over the years, but I like its update of the News Feed, which the company announced and started rolling out this week.

The new News Feed is less cluttered and more graphically appealing. And it gives special prominence to photographs, which now represent about half of all posts in the feed.

I don't think Facebook has gone so far as to create a "personalized newspaper," as CEO Mark Zuckerberg dubbed the new feed, and I worry about how Facebook will fit ads into the new design. But overall it's a welcome refresh.

For Facebook users, the News Feed is essentially their home page on the site. It shows the latest updates from friends, posts from companies and organizations they've "liked," and pictures and links that friends have shared.

Over the years, that page has grown increasingly cluttered. As Facebook has become more popular, the number of friends in users' social networks has expanded and so too has the number of pages they've liked, resulting in what can be an overwhelming number of posts feeding into the News Feed.

Facebook has attempted to sort through the links, showing only those that are most important to users, but the News Feed still often looks like a cluttered list of updates, not much better than what you see on