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3 Reasons to Love Flickr

There is no doubt there are many more reasons then just three to love Flickr, but these are my top three. My first exposure to Flickr was in late 2004, prior to them being bought by Yahoo. Its early use of Ajax, in place of editing and other user interface enhancements, made Flickr stand out and unique. Below are some of the features and qualities that make Flickr my favorite site and one that I visit and use everyday.

1. Openness

Flickr Loves YouThe first great thing about Flickr is its openness. Nearly every function that can be executed on Flickr can be utilized in its Web Services API. On my art site rikcat.com I use Flickr’s API to power the artwork section. I wrote a little PHP script using the phpFlickr class that displays artwork from a specified set of images on Flickr. So in the end, Flickr becomes a back-end tool for the front-end of the artwork section of the site. I’m able to add, subtract, and order artwork any way I’d like.

Flickr is constantly improving their product and you can tell the people working on the product love it as well. Yesterday, they released a new feature that allows you to view stats about your account. It’s only available to pro account holders and the upgraded account is only $24.95 a year.

2. Community

There is a tremendous sense of community on Flickr. I’ve met and collaborated with other artists, in which these relationships have rolled into opportunities to show at galleries and so on. As an artist, putting work up on Flickr provides immediate feedback and the ability to provide encouragement and constructive criticism.

Early last year I received a Flickr mail from a book publisher asking for permission to use a photo I posted of my cat Bobo. I agreed, thinking that the book on pet costumes would never be published. But a couple of weeks before Halloween, a copy of “Dog Trick or Cat Treat” was in my mailbox. About a week later, I was approached by People.com to use the same photo for a feature on pet costumes. All because I shared my photos with the community.

3. Storage

The final reason to love Flickr is disaster proof storage of your images. In the past, I’ve been bitten by some bad backups. One incident, I lost 10 years worth of artwork on a bad Iomega Jaz drive. With a pro account, you get unlimited storage, unlimited uploads, unlimited bandwith and permanent archiving of high resolution images.

Free accounts also have ample features with 100megs of bandwith per month, with some other feature restrictions. Free account holders are limited to 3 sets and photostream views limited to the 200 most recent images. The free account is a good way to find out if Flickr is right for you, then you can upgrade to a pro account for $24.95 a year.

There are so many more features and functions Flickr provides that make it one of the best sites on the web. If you don’t use it already, what are you waiting for?

5 People left comments

  • →   Jorge Quinteros @ December 15th, 2007 at 10:06 pm

    For all the same reason that you mentioned, Flickr to has become a big chunk of my life being as how despite the distance, I’m able to share photos with friends and family abroad so easily. I enjoy receiving comments on random shots that I at first thought were inconsequential but others deem fascinating.

  • →   Phil Smith @ December 16th, 2007 at 9:55 am

    I’m currently developing (in my spare time) a small social app to bring together like-minded creatives to collaborate on projects. It was certainly never intended to replace Flickr, Virb or any other well established community sites – but your article has given me some real pause for thought about how much I can harness (and perhaps augment) the power of Flickr.

    Some great observations – have been lurking around your blog for some time and have finally felt compelled to add a comment – keep up the good work!

    Incidentally, I too have a Pro account and think that $24.95 is an absolute steal for something so awesome! Everyone should sign up for one. Today.

  • →   yann @ December 28th, 2007 at 11:35 am

    unlimited storage and permanent hi-rez archives sounds intriguing, but the scarcity of details looks susupicious…

    I can’t seem to find the “small prints” on the details… The general Yahoo agreement you can click on at the bottom of the page says that they’re not responsible for anything lost on their servers, and even can change the max allowed for any service at any time…

    A little schizophrenic…

    Also, do you personally use it to store RAW files on there or is limited to JPG? If RAW files are possible, it could be a good extra protection in case one of my DVD+R dies on me…

  • →   Rik Catlow @ December 28th, 2007 at 11:41 am

    Well, I don’t work for Yahoo so don’t know the legal details. If you are looking for a backup solution that has a SLA you can try using Amazons S3. It’s cheap and can store all sorts of data. If your working on a Mac Transmit has an interface into S3 that works like FTP.

  • →   yann @ December 28th, 2007 at 2:31 pm

    Yeah, I looked at S3 before, but for the amount of photos I have, it’s not *that* cheap ;)

    I’ve played around with Flickr today and it’s definitely a really well done site… I’m definitely going to get more into the community aspect (noooo! more time wasted on my Mac!! :P) but since everything seems to interface through the Flickr Uploader app and/or website, even with a pro account, it wouldn’t work as a storage solution for me.

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