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A History of Flickr

Ant writes "USA Today has an interesting look back at how Flickr was born. From the article 'Caterina Fake knew she was on to something when one of the engineers at her Vancouver, British Columbia-based online game start-up created a cool tool to share photos and save them to a Web page while playing. "It turned out the fun was in the photo sharing," she says. Fake scrapped the game. She and her programmer husband, Stewart Butterfield, transformed the project into Flickr. In less than two years, the photo-sharing site -- now owned by Internet giant Yahoo! -- has turned into one of the Web's fastest-growing properties.'"

5 of 88 comments (clear)

  1. Re:It's today's version of the slide projector by permaculture · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yet the audience isn't trapped in a dark room. People only view Flickr if they want to.

    You can put up a photo and sent the URL to your friends. Unlike many other photo sharing sites the viewer doesn't have to join. By default every photo is viewable by anyone, though you can restrict this if you wish.

    Flickr is great for photographers. If you're a keen photographer working only in black and white, or in macro or whatever, you'll find photographers to share your work with. Every photo can be given descriptive tags, or joined to public photo groups. You can then search by tag, or browse groups. e.g.

    Every Flickr photo tagged with "londoneye":
        http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/londoneye/

    Group for photos of the City of London:
        http://www.flickr.com/groups/cityoflondon/

    Flickr is pretty good!

    --
    Environmentalism is the new Victorianism. Everyone ties on a green corset and pretends we're virtuous.
  2. Image scraping by Danga · · Score: 3, Informative

    flickr is awesome if you need a lot of images. Its very easy to write a script to scrape all of the images for a certain keyword. It is also really nice to use if you just want to manually search for some images with some keywords. Kudos to the people who brough Flickr to the web.

    --
    Hey, there is only one Return and it's not of the King, it's of the Jedi.
  3. Subscriptions by lbft · · Score: 3, Informative

    Flickr also sells "pro account" subscriptions for the ability to upload more, no ads, etc. for $24.95 a year: http://flickr.com/upgrade/

    1. Re:Subscriptions by uf22 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Flickr is profitable on its own. Caterina confirmed so in this help forum. They have many pro subscribers and they show a couple of small ads on some pages when you haven't paid for a pro account. It seems that is enough. (disclaimer, I work for Y!)

      --
      Have you ever asked yourself, Is It Normal?.
  4. Re:The Important Question by jbrw · · Score: 5, Informative

    I believe the engineer in question is Cal Henderson. Last I heard, he'd just built this to help him get from his new SF home to his desk at Yahoo! HQ.

    He spends a fair chunk of time talking about how flickr was built, the notes of which are really interesting for anyone concerned about scaling out a web app.