Facebook has hired the team at Gowalla, a mobile location service in  Austin, Texas, but the service will be shut down by January, the  companies said Monday.
 
 Gowalla co-founders Josh Williams and Scott Raymond attended Facebook's  f8 conference for developers and entrepreneurs in September, and they  were "blown away by Facebook's new developments". 
 
 "A few weeks later Facebook called, and it became clear that the way for  our team to have the biggest impact was to work together," Williams said in a blog post on Monday.
 
 "So we're excited to announce that we'll be making the journey to California to join Facebook!," Williams said. 
 
 Facebook confirmed that the co-founders and other members of the Gowalla  team are moving to Facebook in January to join its design and  engineering teams.
 
 Facebook isn't taking on the Gowalla service or technology, the company  said in a statement. The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
 
 The Gowalla service lets people share with friends information on the  locations they are in, including through photos taken on their mobile  phones. "The Gowalla Passport has become a record of all the places  we've visited, the people we were with, the photos we took, and the  stories we told," Williams said.
 
 Gowalla, as a service, will however be winding down at the end of  January. "We plan to provide an easy way to export your Passport data,  your Stamp and Pin data (along with your legacy Item data), and your  photos as well," Williams said. Facebook is not acquiring Gowalla's user  data, he added.
 
 Facebook said in its statement that after talking with the Gowalla team,  it realized that it shared many of the same goals, such as  "building  great products that reach millions of people, making a big impact  quickly, and creating new ways for people to connect and share what's  going on in their lives". 
 
 Facebook however declined to comment on whether the products the Gowalla  team would work on would be similar to the offering at their previous  venture.