Archive | June, 2011

5 Best Web Sites for Image Hosting and Photo Sharing

Written by Alan Henry

When you want a service that will organize your uploaded photos, tag them with the date and location, and then share them out to friends, you have plenty of web services to choose from. Many offer editing tools, and others have huge communities. Here’s a look at five of the most popular web sites for robust image hosting.

On Thursday, we asked you which web sites you prefer to manage your photo collections, organize them into galleries, and share them with friends. You weighed in with your suggestions, and we collected the top five. Now we’re back to highlight the ones you suggested.

SmugMug

Five Best Web Sites for Image Hosting and Photo SharingA number of you noted that SmugMug was the ideal photo hosting service for pros – people who really care about their shots. It might have something to do with the unlimited storage for paid users, live customer support, and the elegant and attractive themes and galleries that SmugMug offers. Additionally, SmugMug allows you to quickly share your photos with friends on Facebook and Twitter, mobile apps for iOS and Android, and support for direct uploads from multiple image editing apps.


Picasa

Five Best Web Sites for Image Hosting and Photo SharingGoogle’s Picasa started off as a small service, but with age and features it grew into a photo hosting and image sharing powerhouse that’s free for everyone to use, gives you editing features and gallery management tools, and both a desktop app to keep track of your photos locally and a web app to help you build galleries to share with the web. Picasa integrates with your Google account for sharing, and while it doesn’t have mobile apps, you will see your Picasa Web Albums photos on your Android phone.


Photobucket

Five Best Web Sites for Image Hosting and Photo SharingPhotobucket does an amazing job of walking the line between social network and photo hosting service. Photobucket’s pride is in its users and the way they can connect to one another, share photos with each other or with the world via Twitter, Facebook, or even on their own sites by embedding their photos directly. Photobucket also has mobile apps for iOS and Android, and now the previously mentioned Snapbucket mobile app that makes snapping photos on your phone a bit more fun.


Facebook

Five Best Web Sites for Image Hosting and Photo SharingClose to 700 million users couldn’t be wrong, could they? Uploading your photos directly to Facebook is easy, and since its photo hosting and gallery management tools are easy to use, they’re a great way to get your images in front of the people you want to see them. Plus, you can tag your friends and let them know you uploaded a photo of them, for good or ill. Facebook has mobile apps for virtually every platform, and all of them allow you to post photos. There are no image editing tools, but what it lacks in pro features it makes up for as a social network.


Flickr

Five Best Web Sites for Image Hosting and Photo SharingMention image sharing on the web and Flickr will probably be the first site to jump to mind. With a pro account, you can upload as many photos you want and organize them into as many galleries and collections as you choose. It’s cheap and almost every photo sharing app supports Flickr uploads. Flickr’s competition may have it beat on themes and customizations or mobile apps (Flickr only has official mobile apps for iPhone and Windows Phone 7,) but what it loses it makes up for with an open API and huge community of developers, professional photographers, and photo enthusiasts of all experience levels.

Bonus: Quality Parenting

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10 apps you should install FIRST on your iPhone

Written by Chris Rawson

You’ve taken the plunge and bought your first iPhone. You’ve activated your service with your local wireless carrier, connected and synced it with your main computer for the first time, and brought over as much music, photos, and videos as you can squeeze onto it. Maybe you’ve even played around with Apple’s default apps a bit.

“Now what?” you may be asking yourself. “I’ve heard about all the great apps that are available for the iPhone, but where do I start?”

That’s a very good question, and it’s one that gets harder and harder to answer the more apps make their way into Apple’s App Store. With hundreds of thousands of apps now available for the iPhone, it may seem overwhelming trying to sift through them all if this is your first few hours with an iPhone.

Not to worry, because we’ve got you covered. We put our heads together and came up with a list of the apps you should install first on your brand-new, factory-fresh iPhone. Keeping in mind that people from all over the world use iPhones and read TUAW, we excluded from consideration any apps that don’t have full international functionality. This meant leaving a number of very cool and useful apps out of consideration, but we wanted to make sure this is a list that applies toeveryone, not just US or UK readers. We also kept this list pretty simple; if you’re familiar with the way iTunes separates music collections intoThe Basics, Next Steps, and Deep Cuts, you’ll see that we very much went for The Basics for this go-around.

Click “Read More” to see the full list of recommended apps for first-time iPhone users and our rationale for choosing each one.

1. Find My iPhone – This is hands-down the first app that should go on every iPhone, and it’s frankly surprising Apple doesn’t include it out of the box. This free app won’t help you find your own iPhone, but if you live in a house with multiple iPhones and iPads, it will allow you to find someone else’s.

If your wife drops her iPhone behind the couch and can’t find it after several minutes of frantic searching, you can use Find My iPhone on your own device to ping her device and let her find it in seconds. And if your iPhone gets left behind at a bar and someone runs off with it, you can use Find My iPhone on your wife’s device to track down the thief — it happens all the time, and many people have recovered their expensive devices using this simple, free app.

2. Camera+ – For US$1.99, this app does everything the built-in Camera app ought to do. Camera+ takes photography on the iPhone to levels that seem impossible on a cellphone camera. With built-in exposure controls and grid lines, you have much more control over composing your photos. Once you’ve taken your photos, Camera+ gives you access to a tremendously powerful suite of editing tools that can make simple snapshots look like works of art by the time you’re finished.

Camera+ has built-in sharing tools, but if you want a more social experience for photo sharing, there’s nothing better out there right now than Instagram, which lets you share photos simultaneously across not only its own service, but almost every major social network out there. Instagram also has some basic photo filters you can use to make so-so pics stand out a bit more, but the real draw is seeing and commenting on other people’s pics. It’s very much like what Facebook does with pictures, but simultaneously more powerful and more fun.

3. Dropbox – Dropbox gives your iPhone the file storage solution that Apple still refuses to. While you can’t use your iPhone like a hard drive or flash drive to store files locally (at least not without jumping through a lot of hoops), Dropbox is the next best thing. It offers online-based storage of files, with 2 GB of storage space for free. Even better, you can install Dropbox on a Mac or PC, too, which means sharing documents and files between your Mac and your iPhone is as simple as dragging the file into your Dropbox folder.

4. A messaging app – Why give your wireless carrier more money than you already do? Skype does video chat similarly to Apple’s ownFaceTime, but unlike FaceTime, it works over 3G (most of the time). You can also do free Skype-to-Skype audio with other Skype users, and there’s a free (if basic and sometimes flakey) instant messaging feature as well. If you’re already a Skype user and use the service regularly, Skype for the iPhone will serve your needs.

If you’re not using Skype, or if you’d rather not use the service for one reason or another, BeeJiveIM ($9.99) is a much better alternative to Skype’s instant messaging feature. While it won’t do video chatting or voice calls like Skype, BeeJiveIM will allow you to instant message with your friends over a wide variety of services, including AIM, MSN Messenger, Yahoo! chat, GoogleTalk, Facebook, Jabber, and MySpace IM.

If you download both Skype and BeeJiveIM, you’ve got several communications alternatives to what your carrier offers. Instead of paying for minutes of talktime or SMS/MMS services, you can use Skype or BeeJiveIM to keep in touch for much cheaper.

5. Any Twitter app – Speaking of keeping in touch, Twitter is a fully viable replacement for SMS/MMS, especially if your client app has built-in push notifications that will allow you to get instantaneous updates wherever you may be. Again, why give your wireless carrier more money for overly expensive texting packages? Chances are if this is your first iPhone, you haven’t signed up to Twitter yet. Signing up is free, and if you sign up and get your friends to sign up too, with the right Twitter app you’ll be able to ditch your texting plan entirely.

There are so many Twitter apps on the App Store that it’s probably difficult to choose one, but we’ve got some recommendations there, too.Twitter’s official app is a good choice if you’re just starting out with the service; it’s free, well-designed, has all the basic features you’d expect, and doesn’t bog you down with features so quickly that you get confused. Tweetbot ($1.99) is a good step up from Twitter’s official app, especially since it has a very eye-candy and inspired design. If you’re already comfortable with Twitter’s basic features, Echofon is a nice, geeky choice for a Twitter app; it’s not the prettiest of the Twitter clients, but it’s one of the most feature-rich out there.

6. 1Password – Typing in passwords on the iPhone’s keyboard is usually more of a pain than it’s worth, and it’s a good way to feel safe while you’re doing mobile banking. 1Password allows you to store passwords for websites, bank accounts, Wi-Fi networks, whatever you may need. It’s also got a great “wallet” feature that lets you input things you’d normally carry around in your wallet, like discount cards, library cards, or even your driver’s license — just don’t expect the cops to accept your iPhone as legal ID if they pull you over. You can even jot down notes that you want to keep secured from prying eyes. If you want something on your iPhone, but you want to be the only one to have access to it, 1Password is what you need.

7. Instapaper – If you like to read articles online, and if you ever foresee reading them on an iPhone, you want Instapaper ($4.99). With just a bit of initial setup, you can configure a link in Mobile Safari to send articles to your free Instapaper account so you can read them later. Instapaper is an invaluable tool for creating a cache of reading material on your device. See a lengthy article that you don’t have time for now? Send it to Instapaper and read it when you’ve got the time. Does part of your daily commute involve going through areas with no wireless coverage? Store articles in Instapaper before you leave, then read them later on the train. Instapaper’s one of those iPhone apps that may not seem strictly necessary at first, but once you start using it, you’ll never want to be without it again.

8. Evernote – With a simple interface that lets you make notes with text, photos, or audio, this is your brain on iPhone. This free app can also sync notes with its Mac-based counterpart, so you can type up a grocery list in Evernote on your Mac, sync it to Evernote’s online servers, and have that information waiting on your iPhone when you hit the store. With Evernote on your iPhone, you never need to worry about forgetting anything again — at least as long as you remember to look it up in Evernote, that is.

9. An ebook reader app – The thought of reading entire novels on the iPhone’s tiny screen might seem ridiculous at first, at least until you try out either Amazon’s Kindle app or Apple’s own iBooks. If you’ve already got a Kindle, you can sync over any Kindle books you’ve purchased to your iPhone, and you can even sync your reading progress between the devices.

The only drawback to the Kindle app is that you have to back out into Safari if you want to buy more books. Apple’s iBooks isn’t saddled with that restriction, offering you access to a wide variety of titles in the iBookstore (though not nearly as wide a variety as what Amazon offers). Both apps are very competent ereaders, and while you won’t get that book smell while you’re reading, the ability to carry an entire library of books around in your pants pocket is pretty phenomenal.

10. Any game – The iPhone’s a great communications and productivity device, but it’s also got one of the widest games selections ever. Whether you’re just after some casual fun or an in-depth, full-featured experience, you’ll be able to find it on the App Store. You’ve probably already heard of Angry Birds ($0.99) by now, and that’s as good a place as any to start your iPhone gaming experience if you’re just after some pick-up-and-play fun. Plants vs. Zombies ($2.99) and Tiny Wings($0.99) are other casual titles that are good for first-timers to check out.

If you want to see what the iPhone’s really capable of, download Infinity Blade ($2.99 as of this writing, normally priced $4.99). The gameplay is a bit on the simplistic side, but it has the best graphics of any game on the App Store, with visuals that rival the quality of games on the PlayStation 3. If you find yourself exclaiming “This is on a phone?!” after a couple minutes with this game, you’ll see why we recommended it.

11. TUAW – Okay, we fudged the headline a little bit: this list goes to 11. Our own app will get you the best Apple-related news anywhere on your iPhone. Everything you see at our site, you’ll find in our app.

Keep in mind that this list is only the tiniest sample of what’s out there for the iPhone. We left out a lot of great apps from this list — particularly if you’re in the US, there are several amazing apps out there that we didn’t cover here. But the apps covered in this list will serve as a good jumping-off point for your experience with the iPhone. Above all, don’t just stop once you’ve downloaded the apps on this list; part of the fun of having an iPhone is exploring what’s available for it on the App Store.

We’ll have more posts like this in the future with more app recommendations. Meanwhile, enjoy your new iPhone!

Bonus: Cat!

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AT&T advertising campaign

An AT&T advertising campaign

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