Flickr revamp spotlights photos, social features

By Stephen Shankland on 12 September 2008

Tags: flickr | social networking | yahoo | page

Yahoo has started offering Flickr users a new home page for the photo-sharing site that's designed to show off more images and make it easier for people to use the site's social features.

The redesigned Flickr shows more photos and, through a "recent activity" tab, more social interactions. (Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

Many people just use Flickr to store and share their own photos, but the site also has social features including groups where like-minded people can share photos, a contacts list to share with particular friends, and comments that can lead to a discussion thread. Much of the redesign aims to spotlight these social features, making them more visible and easier to use, said Kakul Srivastava, Flickr's new general manager.

"What we wanted to be able to do is make the home page more engaging, useful and efficient for advanced users who have hundreds and sometimes thousands of contacts and who upload and log into Flickr several times a day (and for) our newest members who are trying to figure out how to engage with Flickr," Srivastava said. The change also is part of the Yahoo Open Strategy, which is geared in part to "light up" Yahoo users' online social activity.

The redesigned page displays more photos, both from the Flickr member and from his or her contacts. And it adds photos from Flickr groups to which the member belongs, said Matthew Rothenberg, director of product management.

Flickr's home page now features a "recent activity" tab that lets people interact more quickly with others on the photo-sharing site.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET News)

Another big change is a "recent activity" tab that displays new comments on a member's photos, notices that others have made the member a contact and other social events.

The change is available now to people who opt for it, but it will become standard for all users in coming weeks, Srivastava said.

Yahoo described the change on its Flickr blog — which, by the way, is now featured on the new home page to spotlight news regarding the site.

Yahoo has gradually added various features to Flickr, including video. But this change is about improving basic parts of Flickr that haven't been changed in a much longer time, Srivastava said.

"This is not about adding new features, it's about reducing the number of clicks of many of our most important core features," she said. As long as a user has a fast network, the new pages load faster, though those with a slow dial-up connection might be constrained since more photos show on the home page," she added.

It doesn't change another core part of Flickr, though, the pages that house each photograph. That will be changed in a future update, she added.

"It's definitely on our roadmap to improve that page," she said.

Flickr currently has more than 30 million registered users, 3 billion page views per month and 60 million unique users per month, she said.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Be the first to comment on this article!

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.


  • Google launches Picasa 3

  • Adobe soups up Photoshop with Pixel Bender

  • Adobe's Lightroom 2.1 brings fixes, camera support

  • Interactive Flickr: Now for everyone

  • Adobe Flash CS4 Professional

  • Adobe embraces latest Canon, Nikon, Sony SLRs

  • Adobe After Effects CS4

  • Adobe Illustrator CS4

  • Adobe defends Aussie CS4 price hike

More articles »

Find the right software

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    • Adobe Flash CS4 Professional

      Adobe Flash CS4 Professional

      With Creative Suite 4, Adobe aims to make Flash easier for newbies to learn and less of a hassle for veteran users to use.

    • Adobe After Effects CS4

      Adobe After Effects CS4

      After Effects, the popular post-production tool for video professionals, offers numerous workflow improvements for the CS4 release.

    • Adobe Illustrator CS4

      Adobe Illustrator CS4

      While it looks like Illustrator CS4 will be a must-have upgrade, don't feel bad if you've got some lingering annoyance that it should have had these must-have features a couple of versions ago.

    • Adobe Photoshop CS4 Extended

      Adobe Photoshop CS4 Extended

      After spending a few weeks working with a beta version, we've concluded that there's just enough that's better in the CS4 updates to Photoshop that many people will find themselves sighing, biting the bullet, and upgrading.

    • MobileMe

      MobileMe

      MobileMe is the successor to .Mac, Apple's subscription service for publishing photos and other personal content to the Web.

    More reviews »

    Membership benefits

    Manage and receive subscriptions

    Manage and receive subscriptions

    Choose to receive an e-mail update containing our best articles either daily, weekly or monthly. Sign up for a free CNET Australia membership now!