In de lessen van Sociale Media kreeg ik de opdracht om anderen meer informatie te geven over hoe je foto's kunt delen via het internet. Hieronder zien jullie de presentatie die ik maakte. Veel plezier!
4. Minus is a simple and easy way to share files
universally across all devices.
Delen van:
Foto’s
Documenten
Muziek
Video’s
4
5. Je kunt Minus gebruiken om:
Een portfolio van jouw werk online te plaatsen
Foto’s en video’s van bv. jouw laatste reis te delen
Jouw werk te publiceren, ook al is het muziek, een e-
book, foto’s, …
Te brainstormen en jouw volgend project te delen
Samen te werken met anderen
Een back-up te maken van jouw bestanden
Om notities te delen met jouw klas
Via een computer, het internet en gsm te delen
5
6. Voordelen:
Gratis
Bestanden blijven er onbepaalde duur opstaan
Je kunt 10GB vrije ruimte krijgen
Onbeperkte downloads en overdracht
Je kunt vrienden volgen om te zien wat zij delen
Je kunt je bestanden en folders plaatsen zoals jij
wilt
Je kunt openbare folders zoeken en ontdekken
Alle soorten bestanden worden toegestaan
6
34. Een website om foto’s te delen
Een online community platform
Net als Delicious wordt het gezien als een
Web 2.0-applicatie die tagging / trefwoorden
gebruikt om een niet-hiërarchische
classificering mogelijk te maken.
Flickr is ontwikkeld door het Canadese
Ludicorp en werd in maart 2005
overgenomen door Yahoo!
34
35. Bij het uploaden van foto's kan de gebruiker
opgeven onder welke voorwaarden anderen de
foto mogen gebruiken.
Foto's kunnen in privé blijven of bestemd zijn
voor gebruikers die toestemming kregen van de
uploader .
Het uploaden kan via pc, e-mail of gsm.
Sinds april 2008 kunnen korte videofragmenten
(90 seconden, 150 MB) geüpload worden
35
36. Flickr groeide in korte tijd uit tot een populaire
opslagplaats
Flickr meet in tegenstelling tot veel andere
fotodiensten niet de opslagruimte, maar het
dataverkeer.
36
37. Er zijn twee soorten accounts:
De gratis accounts kunnen 300 megabyte per
maand uploaden
het pro-account, dat ongelimiteerd kan
uploaden, met een maximale grootte van 20MB
per foto.
37
38. Take the tour:
http://www.flickr.com/tour/#section=welcome
38
70. Artikels:
Overexposed? Artist Fills Room With 24
Hours of Flickr Photos
Flickr Lets You Browse Photos With Friends
On iPhone, iPad and Desktop
Flickr Changes Sharing Options, Cozies Up to
Tumblr
70
71. Overexposed? Artist Fills Room
With 24 Hours of Flickr Photos
Photography has received a boost in recent years with the advent of more
powerful cameras in our phones and the explosion of picture-sharing on the
social web. In fact, we likely share millions of photos a day and the sheer scale
of that sharing is a little hard to imagine. Or is it? Dutch visual artist Erik
Kessels is going beyond imagination by literally printing out every image
uploaded to Flickr in a 24-hour period.
Judging from the above picture, that’s a lot of images. More over, these are
just the pictures from Flickr; imagine what it would look like if Kessels dug into
Facebook, Twitter and other photo-hosting sites such as Picasa.
The installation is on display at the Foam photography gallery in Amsterdam
as part of What’s Next?, an exhibit examining the future of photography.
Kessels’s goal was to make-real the mountains of personal information and
data that people share every single day, he told Creative Review:
71
72. Overexposed? Artist Fills Room
With 24 Hours of Flickr Photos
“We’re exposed to an overload of images nowadays… This glut is in large
part the result of image-sharing sites like Flickr, networking sites like
Facebook, and picture-based search engines. Their content mingles
public and private, with the very personal being openly and un-
selfconsciously displayed. By printing all the images uploaded in a 24-
hour period, I visualise the feeling of drowning in representations of
other peoples’ experiences.”
People have been taking and sharing pictures since the first
daguerreotypes were created in the 1800s. Kessels’s exhibit certainly
forces us to examine how much media we share every day, but couldn’t
the same be said for earlier generations who were just as snap-happy
even if they didn’t have a Flickr account? The question is less about how
many pictures we take but rather how freely we share those images with
complete strangers online.
Are we a society of over-sharers? Is it shocking to see how many photos
are uploaded in a 24-hour period or should we be sharing even more? Let
us know in the comments.
14 november 2011, by Zachary Sniderman
http://mashable.com/2011/11/14/flickr-kessels-photography/ 72
73. Flickr Lets You Browse Photos
With Friends On iPhone, iPad
and Desktop
Flickr has introduced Photo Session, a new feature that lets a group of
people browse photos together from multiple devices — both mobile and
desktop.
Up to 10 people can view and chat about photos in real time with Photo
Session. As photos are uploaded to the set, the group can view and
comment on them. When one user moves on to the next
photo, everybody moves.
The interface focuses on the photo, which is displayed in fullscreen on
your desktop. But it also includes a simple chat interface. Another feature
lets users sketch on top of photos — useful for pointing out something or
just creating doodles.
One of the selling points of Photo Session
is its interoperability. It is available for
iPhone, iPad and the desktop. It’s
especially elegant on the iPad, a device
made for this type of media consumption. 73
74. Flickr Lets You Browse Photos
With Friends On iPhone, iPad
and Desktop
In short, Photo Sessions is a fun but simple feature. The
product is reminiscent of Cooliris, a Kleiner Perkins-backed
startup that offers a robust and elegant way to experience
photos with a group.
It seems Yahoo, which owns Flickr, wants to expand its
social footprint in the photo-sharing space. With dozens of
startups and several big players looking to make their mark
in this space (Facebook and Google chief among
them), Photo Session is one way for Yahoo to keep Flickr
relevant.
September 28, 2011 by Ben Parr
http://mashable.com/2011/09/28/flickr-photo-sharing/
74
75. Flickr Changes Sharing
Options, Cozies Up to Tumblr
Flickr has just introduced some interesting features for sharing your
photos around the web. One of the most significant features is the
addition of Tumblr to the roster of social sharing destinations.
Flickr says today’s changes should make it easier to get uploaded
photos to all corners of the web — wherever those corners happen
to be and even when you’re not a logged-in Flickr user.
“We’ve added Tumblr as a share destination and are retiring native
support of some existing blogs,” Flickr’s Zack Sheppard wrote on
the company blog. “You can always check out the App Garden for
other ways to get your photos out there on the Internet!”
“Upload one, share everywhere” is the idea behind the new
features. Sharing options will take a prominent new place on your
photo pages, and you’ll be able to share groups of photos —
including sets, collections and entire photo streams — to several
social sites as well as sharing them via email.
75
76. Flickr Changes Sharing
Options, Cozies Up to Tumblr
The service also now allows users to share non-public content and
grouped photos to Facebook. Public photos can also be
automatically shared to Facebook as soon as they’re uploaded.
And you can now share photos to Twitter and Facebook even when
you’re signed out of Flickr.
Here are screenshots of the new sharing options:
March 30, 2011 by Jolie O’Dell
http://mashable.com/2011/03/30/flickr-tumblr-
sharing/
76
78. Wat is Picasa?
Snel en gemakkelijk foto’s delen via Google
U kunt eenvoudig uw digitale foto’s ordenen
en bewerken
Vervolgens online fotoalbums maken
Albums delen met vrienden, familie en de
wereld
78
79. Voordelen:
Gratis
Ordenen
Eindeloos bewerken
Creatief zijn
Prachtige webalbums
Op mensen focussen
Delen is niet moeilijk
Plaatsen toevoegen
Foto’s en cadeaus bestellen of thuis afdrukken
79
80. Picasa Webalbums
Foto’s bewerken Foto’s delen met anderen
Afdrukken Openbare foto’s verkennen
80
95. Artikels:
Google adds Picnik Magic to Picasa Web
Albums
Picasa for Mac; Better Than iPhoto?
Picasa Web Albums Now Lets You Have
10,000 Albums
95
96. Google adds Picnik Magic to
Picasa Web Albums
For some time now, Flickr users have been able to use Picnik to edit
photos in-stream without leaving the app. Now that Picnik is a Google
property, Picasa users will have roughly the same advantage.
As of today, Picasa Web Albums users will be able to use Picnik’s editing
tools without ever leaving their accounts.
Google acquired Picnik back in March. While Picnik’s free web app lacks
the fuller features of tools like Aviary’s Phoenix, its simplicity makes it an
appropriate complement for online photo-sharing sites.
On Picnik’s web app, users can crop and resize photos and adjust
brightness, saturation, contrast and other attributes free of charge. The
Picasa implementation will also let you add stickers, apply special effects
and use advanced tools.
Edited photos can be saved as new images in your Picasa Web Album, or
they can be used to replace the original image.
96
97. Google adds Plastic Magic
to Picasa Web Albums
Here’s an example of what
the app will look like and
what you can do with it:
97
98. Google adds Plastic Magic
to Picasa Web Albums
Although Flickr is a Yahoo property, Flickr users are currently still
able to use Picnik to edit images from within the Flickr app “in
Picnik mode,” as well. It’s unclear whether users will lose this
functionality, but such seems unlikely at this time.
What do you think of the Picnik/Picasa integration so far?
July 14, 2010 by Jolie O’Dell
http://mashable.com/2010/07/13/picasa-picnik/ 98
99. Picasa for Mac; Better
Than iPhoto?
Google’s blog is announcing the release of Picasa for Mac at
MacWorld. Even though they’ve previously released a Picasa
Web Albums uploader and iPhone plug-in, the full-featured
free software offers Mac users a way to edit, upload, and
share video and images, surpassing iPhoto in feature set and
maybe even usability.
You’re probably thinking, “I’m already using iPhoto, so
what’s the big deal?” That was certainly my first thought
too, but then I downloaded the software to test it out, and I
changed my tune a bit. Picasa for Mac pulls in images and
videos stored anywhere on your hard drive, lets you edit and
tweak, save changes, and of course upload them to Picasa.
99
100. Picasa for Mac; Better
Than iPhoto?
Picasa for Mac, which is still a Google Labs application (meaning it’s
not perfect), has a feature set that is pretty darn extensive — it would
be almost impossible to list them all — but some cool things you
might like include the ability to filter by stared images, images with
faces, and movies. You can also batch edit photos, create collages
and movie clips, publish to Blogger, take video snapshots, one-click
upload to YouTube, and a whole lot more.
And even if you’re not ready to chuck iPhoto out the window (I know
I’m certainly not), you can still use both tools side by side. In
fact, Picasa for Mac lets you run both applications without
overwriting changes to your iPhoto library. iPhoto library
images, within the Picasa software, are treated as read-only, so any
photo adjustments will create a separate copy of the original image.
100
101. Picasa for Mac; Better
Than iPhoto?
January 06, 2009 by Jennifer Van Grove
http://mashable.com/2009/01/05/picasa-for-mac/ 101
102. Picasa Web Albums Now Lets
You Have 10,000 Albums
Here’s a nice little update for Picasa Web Albums users –
Google has upped the previous limit of 1,000 albums per
account to 10,000. When it comes to storage space for
your photos, it’s the same (7.76 GB, shared between
Gmail, Google Docs, and Picasa Web Albums), but you can
still buy more at very affordable prices.
The default view, however, still only shows a hundred
albums. If you have more and want to see the rest, click on
either “show more albums” or “show all albums” at the
bottom of your page.
April 07, 2010 by Stan Schroeder
http://mashable.com/2010/04/07/picasa-web-albums-
10000/ 102
113. Artikels:
Facebook Timeline: The Next Step Is Coming
Soon
Zo leven we ons uit op Facebook
Facebook krijgt ‘Send Money’-toepassing
113
114. Facebook Timeline: The
Next Step Is Coming Soon
Last night I went in search of an answer to a question that has vexed this
industry for weeks: When will Facebook Timeline officially launch to the
masses? The world’s most popular social network was holding a tiny
gathering in downtown NYC, where I’d get to rub elbows with Timeline’s
architects. I went, figuring one of them had to know the truth.
The small club atop a trendy hotel in lower Manhattan was crowded and
dark. It offered amazing vistas of the city skyline and doted around the
periphery of the room were stations where designers would talk about
how they came up with some of the ideas in Timeline. Eventually, I found
a bespectacled guy talking excitedly to another reporter. I began to listen
in:
“One of the things we learned is that you can’t just walk in and rearrange
the furniture.” It was Sam Lessin, product Manager for Facebook
Timeline, explaining why Facebook was taking its time rolling out
Timeline. The update radically rearranges users profile pages
into, essentially, a timeline of their lives on Facebook and — if they fill in
more details — even before they got on the social networking service.
114
115. Facebook Timeline: The
Next Step Is Coming Soon
Those who really want Timeline right now can, Lessin reminded me, get it. This is true; I
jumped through a few simple developer hoops to get mine and told Lessin how I
marveled at the things Timeline automatically surfaced about my time online. When
your Facebook world is random and disorganized, you can forget about certain photos
and comments—even the ones that generated more Likes and comments. Timeline
reminds you by automatically finding the important ones and putting them in
chronological order.
I inched closer to Lessin, who sounds a lot like Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. He was
warming to his subject and explained the early access enterprising people like me have
enjoyed is part of Facebook’s Timeline roll-out strategy. The social networking giant is
giving those more skilled in technology and social network tools time to learn the new
platform. In essence, it’s building an army of Timeline foot soldiers—not Facebook
employees, but regular people who have gone out of their way to access and build their
own Timelines. These early adopters are already embedded with their own often less
technically adept family members and friends. The Timeline soldiers can help when
friends and family are confronted by the sweeping changes found in Timeline. It’s also
clear that, with events like this one, Facebook is trying to educate the media on the
fundamentals and benefits of Timeline, which I’m sure Facebook execs figure could
help buffet back a public outcry when the changes go live for everyone.
115
116. Facebook Timeline: The
Next Step Is Coming Soon
Changing things and then trying to explain won’t work, Lessin told us. “We
can write all the FAQs in the world and they won’t read them,” said Lessin.
Facebook Timeline can’t stay in this beta form forever. Lessin agreed and said
eventually Facebook will take that next step and make Timeline opt-in for all. I
pressed and asked when that next “step” would come. Lessing would only
smile and say “soon.”
Will there ever come a time when Facebook will, in fact, “rearrange the
furniture” for all of its users? Lessin said that “someday” Facebook will do the
global switchover, but would offer no details of when that might actually
happen. So for now, the couch stays where it is; that ottoman is fine over
there and your favorite easy chair has not moved an inch. You can move one if
you like, but it might be even better if you visited your technophobe parent’s
house and helped them move the furniture—and, yes, I am still talking about
Facebook.
Is Facebook taking the right approach or should it just take the leap and turn
Timeline on for everyone–right now? Let us know your opinion in the
comments.
November 11, 2011 by Lance Ulanoff
http://mashable.com/2011/11/11/facebook-timeline-next-step/ 116
117. Zo leven we ons uit op
Facebook
Met 4,3 miljoen zijn ze, de Belgen op Facebook. En met reden, zo blijkt. Want wie op Facebook zit, is minder
achterdochtig, heeft innigere vriendschappen en raakt minder snel vereenzaamd. Dat blijkt uit een nieuwe studie van
een gerenommeerd Amerikaans onderzoeksbureau.
Check uw vriendenlijst op Facebook. Grote kans dat de meeste namen teruggaan tot uw schooltijd. Wellicht zult u
meer ex-klasgenoten tellen dan familieleden en collega's, zo leert een onderzoek van het Pew Research Center for the
People and the Press over sociale media.
Een andere opmerkelijke conclusie: in vergelijking met andere internetgebruikers vinden twee keer zoveel
Facebookers dat mensen volledig te vertrouwen zijn. In vergelijking met wie niet surft, is dat zelfs drie keer zoveel.
Bovendien zouden Facebookgebruikers innigere vriendschappen hebben en minder snel vereenzamen dan wie de
sociaalnetwerksite niet gebruikt.
'Vooral dat laatste verbaast me', zegt socioloog en social media-expert Ben Caudron. 'Facebook wordt bestempeld als
een sociaal medium, maar het gedrag dat daar meestal mee gepaard gaat - geïsoleerd voor een computerscherm
zitten - is niet zo sociaal. Dat je door Facebook betere vrienden hebt, is dus alleszins opmerkelijk. Want de
eigenschappen die nodig zijn om met anderen in contact te komen, zijn veel complexer dan die om online vrienden te
maken.'
Hoewel de sociaalnetwerksite almaar meer mensen uit de oudere generaties aantrekt, krijgt ze er een geduchte
concurrent bij: Twitter. 'Die berichtensite kwam in ons land traag op gang, maar heeft sinds het Pukkelpop-drama een
enorme boost gekregen. Terwijl voorheen vooral politici, journalisten en BV's het kanaal gebruikten, merken we nu dat
ook de gewone mens Twitter ontdekt heeft.'
MySpace, de sociaalnetwerksite die zich vooral richt op jong muziektalent, doet het dan weer minder goed. Volgens
de onderzoeksresultaten boet de website de laatste tijd sterk aan populariteit in. Caudron: 'My-Space investeert al
lang niet meer, terwijl Facebook - voor sommigen tot vervelens toe - bijna maandelijks vernieuwt. Het succes van
Facebook zit hem vooral in het feit dat het voor iedereen toegankelijk is. Het enige wat je moet kunnen, is lezen en
schrijven.'
November 19, 2011 by Glynis Procureur
117
http://www.nieuwsblad.be/article/detail.aspx?articleid=G1J3IIATS
118. Facebook krijgt ‘Send
Money’-toepassing
Het online betaalsysteem PayPal lanceert een toepassing waarmee de gebruikers van
de sociale netwerksite Facebook geld naar elkaar kunnen sturen. Dat maakte product
manager JB Coutinho van PayPal bekend op haar blog.
Met de toepassing 'Send Money' kunnen Facebook-gebruikers geld sturen naar
elkaar, bijvoorbeeld als verjaardagsgeschenk. Dat kan met of zonder een elektronische
wenskaart erbij.
Coutinho gaf aan dat de dienst gratis is in de Verenigde Staten als via de bankrekening
of via de Paypal-rekening betaald wordt. Hoeveel internationale overschrijvingen
kosten, vermeldt Coutinho niet.
De toepassing werkt als volgt: kies op de link naar de applicatie of je geld met of zonder
e-card wil sturen. Log in op je Paypal-account, geef een bedrag in en klik op 'Send'. De
kaart komt meteen op het prikbord van de ontvanger terecht, maar de boodschap bij
de kaart blijft verborgen voor andere gebruikers.
vrijdag 18 november 2011, 14u34
http://www.nieuwsblad.be/article/detail.aspx?articleid=DMF20111118_116
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