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How to Use Flickr: The Digital Photography Revolution
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by Richard Giles
Sales Rank: 348829
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List Price: $24.99
$18.24
At Amazon

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Paperback: 296 pages
Publisher: Course Technology PTR; 1 edition March 10, 2006
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1598631373
ISBN-13: 978-1598631371
Product Dimensions:
9 x 7.3 x 0.9 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
Customer Reviews & Comments
I must have come late to the party! How did I know so little about Flickr? It is such a natural outgrowth of the Web and digital photography. Flickr is a web site for the storage and display of photographs by anyone who wants to take the time to post them. In that way, it's similar to an individual website. But Flickr is so much more. In the first case, it's so much easier to load a picture onto Flickr, than to create a website. Sign on, click upload a picture, browse through your computer, find the image you want and click. There it is on screen. Flickr lets you limit access to the photo in various ways or open it up to the whole world to see. Then you can add tags (or keywords) to your picture that let that photograph be integrated into the larger Flickr community. Note that word community. That concept is a central tenet of Flickr because the site aims at tying its members together. It does this through a number of devices, like allowing its members to set up groups of like minded photographers. For example, there's a group that features pictures of members looking at pictures of members, or a group that is concerned with the development of Flickr. Members get to comment on each others pictures, and communicate back and forth. And Flickr offers a number of controls so that one can decide just how much or little one wants to participate. And that's just the start. I had a number of questions about Flickr. Setting up a website for your pictures lets you exercise far more control over how people view your pictures. I was also concerned about how you protect your property interest in your pictures until I saw that Flickr will import your EXIF data (if you don't know what that means, it's probably not an issue that will bother you) including an imbedded copyright. Meanwhile, what about the book? You can probably learn all of the potential of Flickr by banging around the website, clicking links. But what Giles has done is put it into order with explanations of capabilities of the program and detailed steps on how to access them and set up your pictures the way you want. For those who are interested in the history of the community or in learning about some other participants, there are sidebars which are not essential to read but interesting to get the feel of Flickr. Giles' writing is accurate and helpful. I easily got onto Flickr (which offers a free membership, although heavy users will want a paying account), uploaded my pictures, and even used those pictures as a feed to a blog. Giles is an apostle of the community aspects of Flickr, and even an old anchorite like me could see where it might be fun to get in on Flickr. My only worry with pursuing Flickr is that I can see where this could easily become an addictive time suck. If you are not afraid of that, and if you are a digital photographer and don't know the in-and-outs of Flickr, it's time to get Giles and get started.
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How to Use Flickr: The Digital Photography Revolution
List Price: $24.99
Available from Amazon
Price: $18.24

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