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What's the big deal about flickr.com?

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What's the big deal about flickr.com?

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  1. you can share your pictures on the web for free


  2. About Flickr

    Flickr - almost certainly the best online photo management and sharing application in the world - has two main goals:

    1. We want to help people make their photos available to the people who matter to them.

    Maybe they want to keep a blog of moments captured on their cameraphone, or maybe they want to show off their best pictures to the whole world in a bid for web celebrity. Or maybe they want to securely and privately share photos of their kids with their family across the country. Flickr makes all these things possible and more!

    To do this, we want to get photos into and out of the system in as many ways as we can: from the web, from mobile devices, from the users' home computers and from whatever software they are using to manage their photos. And we want to be able to push them out in as many ways as possible: on the Flickr website, in RSS feeds, by email, by posting to outside blogs or ways we haven't thought of yet. What else are we going to use those smart refrigerators for?

    Flickr is the WD-40 that makes it easy to get photos from one person to another in whatever way they want.

    2. We want to enable new ways of organizing photos.

    Once you make the switch to digital, it is all too easy to get overwhelmed with the sheer number of photos you take with that itchy trigger finger. Albums, the principal way people go about organizing photos today, are great -- until you get to 20 or 30 or 50 of them. They worked in the days of getting rolls of film developed, but the "album" metaphor is in desperate need of a Florida condo and full retirement.

    Part of the solution is to make the process of organizing photos collaborative. In Flickr, you can give your friends, family, and other contacts permission to organize your photos - not just to add comments, but also notes and tags. People like to ooh and ahh, laugh and cry, make wisecracks when sharing photos. Why not give them the ability to do this when they look at them over the internet? And as all this info accretes around the photos as metadata, you can find them so much easier later on, since all this info is also searchable.

  3. I don't know what the big deal is. I do know when Yahoo sent out an email saying Yahoo would no longer save photos, Flicker was on the list of sites to transfer photos too.

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