Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Yahoo seriously lost sight of that, which resulted in the downhill trajectory that Flickr was on. SmugMug is steering it back to that, because there is clearly a demand for it. If you just want photo storage, those are literally free, all over the place. Google photos, photobucket, icloud, dropbox, etc. They're everywhere.
Since SmugMug bought Flickr the android app has gained the Stats page (strange that it wasn't included, stupid Yahoo), many new incentives to become a pro member and loads of bug fixes and new features like higher resolution image zoom. Can't think of anything other specific right now.
See this FAQ video for more details. Starting May 17, 2022, we will begin removing content in violation of Flickr’s new free account limit policies. This applies to Free accounts with more than 50 non-public photos (private, friends, family, or friends and family). This will be an ongoing process—Flickr has tens of billions of photos, and ...
Public Flickr is the place I post non-people photos (photos of people usually go to Facebook, or Google Photos for direct sharing). I'm also a member of a private family photography group that does a 365 project, so I post a photo and blurb about it for every day, and participate in conversation with the couple dozen other people there who are ...
Flickr Commons is still an invaluable resource for finding license free/creative commons photography for art and research purposes. Community is super quiet now though. Yahoo basically killed Flickr. It did that to both Flickr and Tumblr, which had great user communities.
Open the Flickr app on my iPhone and download the image to my phone. (There’s an option in the app to share the photo to FB, but the formatting is always screwed up.) Open IG and create a new post with the image from my phone.
Flickr Dear friends, Flickr—the world’s most-beloved, money-losing business—needs your help. Two years ago, Flickr was losing tens of millions of dollars a year. Our company, SmugMug, stepped in to rescue it from being shut down and to save tens of billions of your precious photos from being erased.
Flickr is fine, millions of people use it everyday if they were stealing images or abusing users you'd have heard about it by now. I think the only controversial thing I can remember hearing about recently was them selling photos users uploaded under "creative commons", but I think they stopped that pretty quickly after some strong back lash.
Flickr, if you're listening, you're having a real signal-to-noise problem lately, and it's becoming more severe with every passing day. Yes there's a lot of below average photography on the site, but it's becoming increasingly hard to sort the good photography from the better than average Midjourney- or Stable Diffusion-type content.
Thank you, this is very helpful! I'd thought that Flickr might be the solution for making all my Mom's digital photos more accessible for her. But there are enough pictures that I really need to be able to do collections of albums (or some version of nested files) so that she does have to scroll for days.