Just read this on Jason Kottke‘s site – Flickr, the popular online image sharing and social network company, has been acquired by Yahoo!
Take A Leap
Via Robert Scoble
Sending images across to your friends and family have always been a major pain in the you-know-where. I use YouSendIt to send large files, zipped or unzipped to my clients. Even today, as I attempted to use that service, my machine choked and I had to split the delivery into seven separate packages. Not fun.
Well, just as I was lamenting about this to a colleague at work, I saw Robert Scoble's short post about PhotoLeap.
I have yet to try this service – there are options for free, plus and pro – but from a cursory look I think it holds a lot of promise for both PC and Macintosh users.
It just may make my life easier when clients come-a-calling for me to ship them images and neither my ISP nor theirs will cooperate. Try it out and let me know what you think.
Get Shutterbug!
Photographers and other visual artists take great pains to create work but when it comes to presenting them, things seem to rapidly fall apart. I am certainly guilty of it. Given how quickly an editor or a client makes up her or his mind about assigning a photographer, sloppy presentation could mean the end of one's career. I am learning, however slowly, that presentation is an art in itself. And it is important to get it right.
These days most photographers depend on web sites to show off their work. You don't have a web site? It's not brain surgery to put one together. I'll go over the steps that I am taking to organize my work online, but what is making it very easy for me these days to exhibit my work online is a program called Shutterbug.
Shutterbug, made by XtraLean Software also brought us the magnificent and free photo editing tool, ImageWell. I was ga-ga about Imagewell and now I am going bonkers over Shutterbug. Read on to see why.
Both ImageWell and Shutterbug operate only on the Apple Macintosh OS X platform. That alone says something. At under 2 megabytes, the program is lean; so your computer won't get bogged down. The drag-n-drop feature saves you from hunting for your images through an archaic (yeah, you windows users!) mapping system. It is possible to have an online slide show in a matter of minutes. As a test, I created a slide show of my cousin's recent engagement. I chose a built-in template to first format the gallery display, then tweaked the background color, positioned the elements on the page by dragging boxes on the fly, made sure that the thumbnail images were cropped just so and set the timing to give the slideshow the right pace. I then uploaded the slideshow to my .Mac account, but one has the option of also saving it to a desktop folder and uploading the entire package to a different server. It's simple, intuitive and it works extremely well.
While the program itself is a hit in my opinion, as a beta-tester, I have been extremely happy with the kind of service I have received directly from the company. Features that I request miraculously appear in the next build, and I am assured in every email exchange that the small New Hampshire based company is batting for me, the end user. There are online forums to post questions and request new features, too. Check it out. You will be pleasantly surprised.
I am in the process of writing a more detailed review of Shutterbug for the local Macintosh Users Group. I'll share that with you by the end of February. Meanwhile, do yourself a favor and download the demo and give it a whirl. For $29, this feature rich slide show program is a boon. I know I couldn't do without it in my arsenal of imaging tools.
Be An Advertisement
I am not crazy about flaunting brands, but I am a wee bit mad about anything remotely associated with Apple (or Pixar).
iPodMyPhoto will take your picture and recreate it as an iPod advertisement for $20. Do you want it on a t-shirt, a mug, Christmas cards, a bill board off of I-84? Your call.
Digital Prose
Although computers can work unhindered by free will, bourbon or divorce, such advantages are outweighed by a lack of life experience or emotions.
It might seem utterly illogical, but computer scientists have been able to get their machines to compose short bursts of prose. Novelists need not feel threatened for the reasons outlined above.
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