There's so much buzz around Flickr right now it's practically deafening. Or maybe I should say blinding, because Flickr is a collaborative photo sharing service. I was perplexed why Yet Another Photo Sharing Website was so hot until I started browsing the myriad hacks and tools available for this site. Flickr has a web API, and there's a .NET wrapper around that API available at Flickr.NET. It's truly astonishing; a case study in what having an open API and community-driven content can do for your business. Here are some of the cooler Flickr hacks (warning-- heavy use of Flash ahead)
As you can see from the above sampling, Flickr is all about tags. There's a neat page on Flickr that shows the most popular tags at any given moment.
Amateur photographers take far better pictures, on the whole, than I could have ever possibly imagined. After seeing this, who needs professional photographers? Still, there's a big gap between the good and great pictures. My biggest frustration with flickr is that there's no rating system for the pictures. You can only browse pictures by user, or by keyword. I have a hard time coming up with tag keywords (frogs? dogs? clouds? graffiti?), and I don't really know any Flickr users. I'd rather just subscribe to some feed of highly rated pictures. Sort of an AmIHOTorNOT for photos, but hopefully without the prurience and desperation.
This is, of course, only the tip of the iceberg. There's an exhaustive list of all the Flickr hacks at The Great Flickr Tools Collection.
I have found flickr to be a great way to provide annotated screenshots (click my name to see). A little interactive annotation goes a long way - replaces what would be very lengthy (probably ponderous) descriptions.
Carl Manaster on June 8, 2005 7:08 AMTracking good pictures is not straightforward I agree.
I find once you look at the groups you tend to see higher quality photos, and you can easily add anyone you like as a "contact".
Don't forget also, just about everything in Flickr has an RSS feed.
You can track your contacts photos through RSS.
Of course, all of these things require spending lots of time on Flickr - once you get truly hooked that's not hard. :-)
Darren on June 9, 2005 7:02 AMFlickrSearcher ver 1.6 with Flashr and Flickr open api,
This is a flash application. It thanks.
Click download
http://jasu.tistory.com/attachment/dm227.exe
Application information
http://jasu.tistory.com/199
The best way to find good pictures is to visit Flickr's Explore page: http://flickr.com/explore
The page is updated with 500 new 'best of Flickr' photos everyday.
The Digital Monk on July 2, 2007 3:24 AMThe comments to this entry are closed.
|
|
Traffic Stats |