![]() We use the contacts and groups API’s to give control over privacy. We currently have two types of rooms – “personal rooms” tied to a user and rooms based on Flickr groups. ![]() Your identity on Photophlow is your Flickr identity, so of course we take advantage of authentication. ![]() How are you integrating with Flickr? What services or API methods do you use? (editor note: Also checkout the photophlow group!)Ģ. If you’d like to a quick tour of Photophlow I’d recommend this screencast. We also integrate with the major IM networks to notify you instantly when things happen in Photophlow, like someone commenting on one of your photos. For example you can send out a Twitter message with a link to your Photophlow room to invite your followers to a real-time conversation over photos. We also integrate with some other services like Twitter and Tumblr. Photophlow is meant to be used for all types of interactions around photos – organized activities such as group critiques and tutorials, as well as just plain hanging out and sharing. You can comment on photos, fave them, tag them and more, and all of this is shared with the group in real-time. As you search and share photos the group you’re browsing with sees the same things you are instantly. Photophlow is a web application for real-time group Flickr browsing. Can you say a bit about what Photophlow is for people who don’t know? I knew when we started talking about Code.Flickr I wanted to have interviews with third party developers, and I knew that I wanted my first interview to be with Neil Berkman, one of the engineers behind the amazing Photophlowġ. Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged api, fireeagle, geotags, gps, places, tools, twitter FireDopplGängEaglr Read the rest of “Twitter API updates, FireEagle and new Flickr API fun” for more on Twitter’s location API, FireEagle, and Flickr’s not-a-geocoder. It’d be great if you didn’t have to update twitter yourself and there was something else out there that could do it for us. There’s no direct reason for twitter to have location stuff, (well no more than Flickr I guess) but everyone knows that everyone wants it. … which is nice as it’s just thrown in there as a ‘what if’ type of thing. There so developers can start playing with how geolocation might fit Nothing fancy, no geocoding or normalization. – sets the location for theĪuthenticated user to the string passed in a “location” parameter. I don’t think there’s a conflict there, I just like to make these things clear.Last night twitter released their next batch of API improvements, of course the one that caught my eye was … (Disclosure: Though Flickr is now owned by SmugMug, it was owned by Yahoo/Oath before that. SmugMug outlined its thinking on why the 1 terabyte limit wasn’t working (and how the new 1,000 photo limit was chosen) in a post back in November. Even photos that you don’t really care about now can end up meaning a lot in a few years. Take those and put them somewhere else - an external hard drive, Google Photos, a spare SD card, all of the above, whatever. Within a few hours, you should get an email with a big ol’ zip file with all of your pictures. Hit the “Request my Flickr data” button.Double check that the email address listed is your current one.Scroll down, and look for “Your Flickr Data” in the bottom right.Tap your profile picture in the upper right, then hit “Settings”.So how do you back it all up? You can go through and download them one by one, but that’s pretty painful. After February 5th, 2019, if you have a free account that contains more than 1,000 photos or videos, we will begin actively deleting content from your account starting from oldest to newest date uploaded to meet the new limit. ![]()
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