Showing posts with label photo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photo. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2011

A Photo Of The Future: Facebook Search (GOOG)


Someone built a site called Facebook Search. Now it searches Facebook. But the design shows what scares Google more than anything else: a Facebook search engine. Right now it's not in the cards. One day it could be.

facebook search

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A Photo Of The Future: Facebook Search (GOOG)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/KUGsrEzOnOk/facebook-search-2011-7

A Photo Of The Future (GOOG)


Someone built a site called Facebook Search. Now it searches Facebook. But the design shows what scares Google more than anything else: a Facebook search engine. Right now it's not in the cards. One day it could be.

facebook search

Guess Who Has The Most Followers On Google+ →

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

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A Photo Of The Future (GOOG)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/KUGsrEzOnOk/facebook-search-2011-7

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Why is there such a recent surge in funding photo startups?

In Startups: Answer added in topic Mobile Location Applications.

Srini Kumar, Creator of TinyVox: tape audio & post to the cl...


It's a Marshall McLuhan thing.



Until photo sharing became easy and widely available, point to point communication was limited to the phone and text-based email.



People don't like to type that much. An innovation on Quora is that their UI has a textarea that's very fun to type in; another innovation on word processing is Ommwriter for the Mac... these are very engaging platforms to type into. Email isn't one of these platforms. Twitter and the Facebook News Feed are, but note how limited the writing usually is - 140 characters or less...



It can be rewarding to type into one's blog. Text when published (Quora again being an example) can be a great way to connect with strangers. But we don't send long emails to our friends and family much... we'd rather talk with them on the phone than write them an essay, in general. Emails between family members, in particular, devolve into grunts of "call home" or "got back safe, wonderful visit." Gone is the art of letter writing, replaced by something called "search engine optimized content creation." People don't really write much anymore in long form, and almost never within the context of a point to point communication (perhaps a cover letter for a résumé or a business proposal constitute exceptions).



Photos broke this communication throttle between close ties wide open, with a side helping of broadcast potential. Photos convey a "light rich media" experience that can be encoded in a jiffy from any location and decoded just as fast by the recipient. Photos capture a milieu and a moment without having to open up Gmail and cook on the perfect words. Photos constitute a "social ping" that conveys presence without requiring much cogitation.



We now communicate with photos far more readily than with email (or any other form of text). Photos convey a "biological" richness that maps onto family and friend communication more readily than blocks of text. We created TinyVox in this spirit of "typing is too slow". Point to point communication should not resemble an essay contest, and photo and other quick rich media gives users new options for intimate communication that both sender and receiver find new and appealing.



And finally: babies and kittens.



See question on Quora

Why is there such a recent surge in funding photo startups?


Backlink: http://www.quora.com/Startups/Why-is-there-such-a-recent-surge-in-funding-photo-startups#ans605025

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Pixable’s ‘Life Of A Facebook Photo’ (Infographic)

It's tough to beat my colleague Alexia Tsotsis' witty 'What Mobile Photo Sharing App Should I Use' infographic. Today Pixable, a startup that develops sleek social photo creation and categorization tools for Facebook and other photo sharing sites, is releasing its own photo sharing infographic focused on photo-sharing and the 'hard knock' life of a photo on Facebook. Pixable’s service, which has 800,000 users, allows people to use of all their Facebook and image sharing site photo content like captions, tagging information, comments, and birthdays to make albums, slideshows, calendars and nor artwork. Pixable’s browser-based simplifies the creation of albums, making it easy to use for anyone. One of Pixable's early applications was a nifty tool that allows you to make mosaics of your Facebook photos.

Pixable’s ‘Life Of A Facebook Photo’ (Infographic)


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/INqYub1JZUE/

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Why Twitter's New Photo Service Is Not The End Of The World For Instagram


iPhone photo Instagram

As expected, Twitter CEO Dick Costolo announced Twitter's new photo uploading and sharing service today at the WSJ's D9 conference.

You can read more about it here, or check out Twitter founder Jack Dorsey's blog post about it here. (It's Dorsey's first post for the Twitter blog since 2008, if we're not mistaken.)

Today's announcement is bad news for simple Twitter photo-hosting services like TwitPic and Yfrog, which have not done much to differentiate themselves, and won't likely be the default photo sharing service for any official Twitter apps in the future.

Their usage will probably sink or flatten as Twitter's new service, powered by Photobucket, rolls out.

But this isn't the end of the world for Instagram, another popular (and fast-growing) mobile photos service.

Instagram has differentiated itself very well, through features -- like its photo filters and ability to share photos with many services at a time, like Twitter, Facebook, and Tumblr -- and its community and social elements.

Instagram seems well on its way to becoming a powerful mobile social network of its own, based on photography. Flickr for the future, basically. And a plain-vanilla Twitter photo uploading service just doesn't seem like much of a threat to that. If anything, once more people get used to the idea of sharing photos on Twitter, they might even consider Instagram an "upgrade," boosting its growth.

Today, we wouldn't want to be stakeholders in TwitPic or Yfrog. But Instagram seems like it can still be a big success.

Related: How To Use Your iPhone On Vacation (The Right Way!)

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Why Twitter's New Photo Service Is Not The End Of The World For Instagram


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/2-SAt9yypK8/twitter-instagram-2011-6

Introducing Twitter's New Photo Search Service


Twitter Photos

Today, Twitter introduced a new search results page that will show photos and video uploaded to the site.

The new search product will also "deliver more relevant Tweets when you search for something or click on a trending topic," says product boss Jack Dorsey in a blog post.

Reports promised that Twitter would roll-out a new photo-upload service today, but Twitter says that won't come till "the next several weeks."

"We'll be releasing a feature to upload a photo and attach it to your Tweet right from Twitter.com," writes Dorsey.

Photobucket will be hosting the photos uploaded by Twitter users.

Here's a video demonstration:

For the latest tech news, visit SAI: Silicon Alley Insider. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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Introducing Twitter's New Photo Search Service


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/MDxOVZtaMfU/introducing-twitters-photo-service-2011-6