WebProNews

Tag: images

  • Tornado Apocalypse Creates Compelling Imagery

    Tornado Apocalypse Creates Compelling Imagery

    In 2011, the month of May clearly belongs to the tornadoes. After separate storms ripped through parts of Alabama and Missouri, leaving a massive trail of destruction in their paths, the nation was reminded in no uncertain terms just how powerful these weather events really are. The response to these disasters has been quite swift, even on a federal government level, as communities in the stricken towns work to get back on their collective feet.

    While the destruction was indeed a sobering reminder of the powerful abilities of tornadoes, the events also produced some amazing imagery. Granted, most of these images are at the expense of another person’s suffering, and with that in mind, this follow-up article has absolutely no disrespect intended for those whose lives were damaged or destroyed by these twisters. That being said, it’s almost impossible to ignore the eye-catching qualities these post-tornado images have. In fact, many of these images are, from this writer’s humble perspective, Pulitzer worthy pieces.

    Perhaps the most “famous” of this new crop of disaster images was the before and after comparison, which hit the Intertubes earlier this week. Thanks to some amazing photography from Aaron Furman’s Flickr account, we can compare what certain areas of Joplin, Missouri looked like before and after the tornado strike hit. The after pictures are sobering.

    Joplin, Missouri

    And then there’s this amazing comparison over at the Mail Online, with the caption of “The six-block scar,” perhaps the most accurate image description, ever.

    Over at BuzzFeed, they also have a collection of high-end aftermath pictures, one of which leads this article. While the majority of the images are heart-wrenching and powerful, at least one shows the relief and happiness that can occur from surviving such an ordeal:

    Reunion

    And then, there are the videos. A lot of videos in fact, as mobile devices of many makes and models captured the destruction for all to see. Perhaps the most viewed comes from YouTube user izelsg, and it’s a first-person perspective of being caught inside a store while an F5 tornado hits. The images aren’t great, but the audio tells one hell of a story.

    From izelsg’s description:

    The video i took of the F5 tornado while at Fastrip on east 20th street. We huddled in the back of the store until the glass got sucked out , then ran into the walk in storage fridge. Sorry for the lack of visuals but the audio is pretty telling of how intense the storm was. The tornado hits at around 1:20 seconds.

    There’s also an aftermath video, also taken by izelsg, which revisits the store in question:


    And these are just two videos of an ever-growing amount, most of which capture the events in Joplin amazingly well. An example:

    These are just Joplin videos. While the state of Oklahoma didn’t suffer the damage of Alabama and Missouri, there’s an incredible video of a tractor-trailer getting absolutely decimated by a funnel cloud:


    And then there’s this incredibly cry-worthy story of the dog who found his way back home after the Alabama tornadoes tore through the state. Oh, the dog made it back home with TWO broken legs. You might want to grab your tissues before watching:


    All I can say after that is “Mason 4 President!!!!!!!”

    So while the violence of tornadoes can absolutely wreck anything in its path, the aftermath, while often brutal, also shows our capacity for kindness, qualities people thanfully still carry around with them.

  • Facebook Testing Out New Photo Viewer

    You can say this for the Facebook developers, they certainly don’t rest on their laurels. Whatever design Facebook is currently using, rest assured they are working on an upgrade, threatening to remove the comfort the current design provides. And if you don’t think there isn’t any outcry when Facebook introduces changes, you haven’t been paying attention.

    With that in mind, allow us to introduce the new design for the Facebook photo viewer. Normally, the image viewer has a black background, like so:

    Facebook Photo Viewer

    However, today, Jeremy Muncy took a screenshot of what appears to be a new version they are either testing or via staggered update cycle:

    Facebook Photo Viewer
    See a bigger image of the new layout here

    While you’ll probably notice Mike McDonald’s melancholy face first — cheer up, Mike, it’s Friday — pay attention to the different layout being used. Compare it to the initial image if you need to. The old one offered a huge, black frame, but little else. The new layout, however, shows likes, comments and the background of it is semi-transparent, giving you a glimpse of the page beneath it.

    Now, is this a small glance at an upcoming site-wide update/reskinning or did Jeremy simply wander into a testing cycle when he was previewing Mike’s image? Time will, of course, tell. I, for one, welcome our new Facebook photo viewer layout overlords. It certainly looks better than that ridiculous border surrounding the first example. Talk about unused whiteblack space. Of course, knowing the Facebook crowd’s natural resistance to anything that disrupts their Facebook routine, it wouldn’t be a bit surprising to see some backlash if the new layout takes hold across the Facebook network.

    Does anyone want to offer a guess on how many “Change the photo viewer back” Facebook pages will pop up if the update goes live?

  • Stolen Camera? StolenCameraFinder Might Be of Help

    Did you finally decide which digital camera to buy, only to see it come up stolen? Are you afraid your hard-earned purchase is being used to populate another person’s Facebook page? If so, StolenCameraFinder.com could be of assistance.

    Living it up to its name, StolenCameraFinder.com makes use of the data available in the exchangeable image file format (EXIF), compare the tags of images in the index, and discover whether or not your missing camera was the one being used. Granted, recovery of said stolen camera is still up to the victim, and whatever authorities they decide to involve, but finding out who stole your camera is easier now, thanks to the website in question.

    The website explains how it does what it does with various explanations that appear throughout:

    stolencamerafinder uses the serial number stored in your photo to search the web for photos taken with the same camera.

    And:

    Is your camera lost or missing? Has your camera been stolen? If so, stolencamerafinder can help you find out where it is now.

    We can help to locate a missing camera by searching for photos on the web that have been taken by that camera.

    There are currently over 1 million camera sightings in our database and counting…

    There’s also a FAQ for those of you who would like to know more about the process, and if you’d like to volunteer some assistance, you can do that, too. The useful creation also features a list of cameras it supports.

    StolenCameraFinder was developed by Matt Burns, a jack-of-all-trades style of developer who has also developed other projects like Screenwaker.

    Hat-tip to Boing Boing for the find.

  • Bahrain Protest Photos Flood Flickr

    Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube often get a lot of the attention when it comes to social media spreading news of revolutions and uprisings in foreign nations, but Yahoo-owned Flickr is reminding everyone that it plays a significant role as well. 

    Photos can say a lot, and Flickr has plenty of those. The company is highlighting user-submitted photos from the protests in Bahrain. 

    IMG_1884

    Flickr has posted a few select images from the protests on its company blog. You can see a lot more, however, if you do a search for "bahrain protest". 

  • Google’s Really Taking This Speed Thing Seriously

    Google has placed a great deal of emphasis on speed for the last year or two, offering numerous tools and resources aimed at speeding things up. In fact, Google has even attempted to speed up the search engine itself with Google Instant. 

    The speed theme continues as Google has introduced a new image format from the web, aimed at speeding up load times. It’s called WebP.

    What do you think of Google’s new image file format? Share your thoughts

    Here’s a sample of the announcement:

    Most of the common image formats on the web today were established over a decade ago and are based on technology from around that time. Some engineers at Google decided to figure out if there was a way to further compress lossy images like JPEG to make them load faster, while still preserving quality and resolution. As part of this effort, we are releasing a developer preview of a new image format, WebP, that promises to significantly reduce the byte size of photos on the web, allowing web sites to load faster than before. 

    Images and photos make up about 65% of the bytes transmitted per web page today. They can significantly slow down a user’s web experience, especially on bandwidth-constrained networks such as a mobile network. Images on the web consist primarily of lossy formats such as JPEG, and to a lesser extent lossless formats such as PNG and GIF. Our team focused on improving compression of the lossy images, which constitute the larger percentage of images on the web today.

    JPEG vs WebP files

    Those interested in SEO will likely find the status of the format worth paying attention to, as Google recently announced that it now counts page speed as a ranking factor. Just remember, page speed is only one of about 200 ranking factors Google takes into consideration. 

    Google has a site set up where you can compare the sizes and load times of JPEGs to WebPs. Google also has a conversion tool to convert images to the new format that can be downloaded, and is working with the web browser and web developer community to add support for the format. 

    Google is also developing a patch for WebKit to provide native support for WebP in an upcoming release of Chrome. The company says it also plans to add support for a transparency layer or alpha channel in a future update.

    It will be very interesting to see how widely this format gets adopted over time. 

    If Google can gain enough support for WebP, will you use it for your web images? Will they gain the support? Let us know. 

  • Facebook Launches New Features for Photos

    Facebook has introduced 3 new features for Photos. These include high resolution images (storing bigger pictures), a new viewer for browsing photos, and a new uploader with better tagging. 

    Facebook is rolling out support for print-quality, hi-res photos. They’re increasing the size of the photos stored from 720 pixels to 2048 pixels on the largest side or 8 times bigger overall. 

    "The new viewer makes it simpler and faster to navigate photos," says Facebook’s Sam Odio. "You can now view photos and even whole albums without even having to go to a new page. Instead, the photo opens in the center of your screen, and you close it when you’re done. There’s no need to go back and forth between pages or reload the page."

    "A new light box (the dark frame around your pictures) makes viewing photos a richer experience," adds Odio. "We also rewrote all the code for the viewer from scratch, so paging through photos will be noticeably faster."

    The new uploader uses Flash to give users what Facebook says is a better experience, particularly when you’re uploading a lot of pictures. The new uploader also lets you tag multiple photos in the same album at the same time, as well as tag photos of the same person with less effort. 

     

  • Inside the Google Phonebooth, Apple Refuses to Show “Green” Rank

    Inside the Google Phonebooth, Apple Refuses to Show “Green” Rank

    Today seems to be redesign day. Digg began rolling out its new redesign to all users (follow us here). MySpace introduced a redesign to profiles. In addition to these, UStream unveiled its own redesign with changes to the homepage as well as the dashboard.

    Guardian reports that Apple has refused to allow its iPhone to be included in the UK’s green ranking system, which gives phones a rating of zero to five based on their environmental footprint.

    As you may have heard, Google unveiled a new feature in Gmail today that allows users to make and receive phone calls. In addition to this, Google will be setting up phone booths on college campuses and in airports. Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land shares a video looking at the inside of the phone booth and talking to the product marketing manager about it:

    According to PaidContent, Alibaba has acquired eBay auction management provider Auctiva. It recently acquired a similar service in Vendio.

    Nick Bilton at the New York Times has an interesting profile of a startup called Stipple, which aims to tag the web’s images. It lets publishers add tags to parts of an image with info about its contents and related links. Launch partners include Six Apart, Jive Records and E.W. Scripps.

    Ian Sheer at the Wall Street Journal has an interesting piece about online coupons and how they’re getting smarter. "Among the new approaches: computer programs to better target consumers with personalized deals and staff on the ground to help merchants," he writes.

    ReadWriteWeb points to a video of Apple SVP of software engineering, Bertrand Serlet, who talks about using Apple’s private APIs.

    According to Guardian, Facebook is now being valued at over $33 billion as investors try to secure a stake in it. Facebook shares are changing hands for up to $76 each, the publication reports. Still, it doesn’t look like there will be an IPO anytime soon.

    Ad firm Specificmedia is being sued amid accusations that it is re-creating deleted cookies, according to Wired’s Epicenter.

    Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg at the WSJ reports that Amazon has lost a big e-book deal with literary agent Andrew Wylie. This comes as the company also announced that its new Kindles are selling faster than any previous models.

  • Bing Launches Gallery of All Past Homepage Photos

    In case you’ve ever wanted to browse an archive of Bing’s homepage images, you can now do so. Microsoft has launched the Bing Homepage Visual Search Gallery.

    Whereas with the arrows on the homepage itself, you can view a week’s worth of Bing photos, you can access any of them from this gallery.

    Bing's new photo gallery for home page photos

    "Now you can go back through previous homepage images to see what you’ve missed or revisit old favorites," writes Stephanie Horstmanshof on the Bing Search Blog. "And you can sort by a variety of categories, including all the homepages featuring countries in Europe, or every homepage image from space."

    "Click on the image you like, and you’ll be taken to a details page where you can learn more about the subject in the photo and see related images," she adds. "And click ‘ZOOM IN’ for an even larger view!"

    Bing’s home page photos are one thing that sets it apart from other search engines. In fact, I know some people that go to Bing daily just to look at the photos, even though they do most of their searching with Google. Google recently added its own photo-homepage option, but it wasn’t quite as well received, and that’s more of a personalization thing.

  • Facebook Photo Tagging Goes Web-wide

    Facebook Photo Tagging Goes Web-wide

    Face.com, the developers of the facial recognition technology behind Facebook apps like Photo Tagger and Photo Finder announced that it is opening up its API, which will allow developers to take advantage of this technology anywhere on the web. We had a chat with Face.com founder Gil Hirsch, who talked about the technology, the API, Facebook’s Open Graph, and what kind of apps we can expect to see around this API.

    Basically, the API allows third-parties to utilize the technology behind Photo Finder and Photo Tagger to create new and unique ways of utilizing facial recognition. Face.com has scanned billions of photos and tagged over 50 million users through these two apps. Between the API and Facebook’s Open Graph initiative, imagine how many more will be scanned/tagged.

    "What it means for us, is you can now apply facial recognition on your social graph," Hirsch tells WebProNews. You can take the functionality to other websites. "You can take it outside the walled garden [of Facebook]." You can ID your Facebook friends in Picasa or Flickr photos for example.

    Hisrch says he’s heard two to three hundred people have ideas for what they wanted to do with the technology before they even opened up the API. These things range from retail apps to e-cards, and campaign managers wanting to personalize campaigns. "Everyone came up with a different idea," he says.

    The company has some sample apps set up to give developers an idea of the kinds of things that are possible. One such example is the Tagger Widget. This lets users add a Face tagging interface to any image on a webpage. It automatically places tags on people’s faces, and allows users to add names.

    Face.com Sample of API use - Tagger Widget

    Another example is PosterYourself, which lets you inject your Facebook friends’ faces into images for things like e-cards, posters, and other creative apps:

    Face.com Sample of API use - Poster Yourself

    These are just a couple of examples. There’s no telling what we’ll see developers actually do with this technology. Technorati Founder Dave Sifry is already utilizing the API for some apps. He says, "I’ve been impressed with Face.com’s API, and their plan for working closely with developers to build great applications   that incorporate face detection and face recognition. Open platforms like this one will enable the creation of exciting new applications that we’ve never seen before at scale."

    Facebook’s Open Graph has already caused a great deal of concern over privacy. It will be interesting to see if any such concerns are raised over this, with people’s faces are coming into play (though that was really already happening through Facebook itself).

    "Privacy is something from day one we’ve put in everything we do," says Hirsch. He says Face.com applies the same logic that applies inside of Facebook. You can only ID people within your social graph. He says they enforce that through verification through valid Facebook or Twitter sessions. You can’t just do people who aren’t your friends.

    The idea behind this API is that people will create more engagement around photos all around the web, Hirsch says. A lot of people ask him if it can be applied to security strategies, but Face.com is more focused on the consumer world, and applying its technology to consumer apps – not security.

    Face.com does have a product that can help you monitor where your Face is being used, however. It’s had "Face Alerts " for a while. Think about this as Google Alerts for images of you.

  • Google Gives Mobile Users a Link to Popular Images

    Google has introduced a new feature for its mobile Image Search offering. The feature is "Popular Images," and lets Android and iPhone users browse popular images (go figure).

    The Popular Images feature comes in the form of a link just under the search box on the Google Image Search page. When clicked, it brings up a categorized list of image searches and corresponding images.

    Google Popular Images

    "We have organized popular images across a few categories like Movies, Sports, Cars & Bikes, Music, and Cartoons," says Google’s Mobile Engineering team in a blog post on the Google Mobile blog.  "You can click on individual categories to see related images corresponding to what’s popular on Google Image Search."

    The queries are categorized automatically with an algorithm, which Google says will continue to improve over time. There is a "Trends" category that shows image queries based on Google Trends.

    The feature is only available in the U.S. at this point. There is no word on when this will expand to other countries.

    Related Articles:

    > Google Puts More Images (And One Big Pic) On Results Pages

    > Google Experiments with a New Image Search Feature

    > Google "Similar Images" Feature Goes From Labs to Actual Feature