Google is set to launch late Tuesday a new feature in its Picasa photo management application that will let people organise and share photos over the Web.

Picasa Web Album initially will be available only to a limited number of Gmail users at http://picasaweb.google.com, said Adrian Graham, a product manager at Picasa.

Picasa, technology Google acquired in 2004, is free downloadable software that lets people find and edit photos on a desktop computer and send them to others from a Gmail account or publish them on a blog.

Picasa Web Album is designed to let people easily upload and store their photos on the Web. Uploaded albums can be public and available to anyone who knows the Gmail account under which they're listed, or private ("unlisted") and available only by way of a special link Picasa users can send to whomever they wish.

"All users need to do is select the photos they want to share and click on a button and the photos are online," Graham said.

Viewers do not need to sign in or have a Gmail account to see the photos. A "recent activity" section shows recent photos uploaded by friends. Users can comment on each others' photos and can store about 1,000 photos or so before needing to pay for more storage, Google said.

Photos automatically resize to fit the screen and have no ads next to them. Images are preloaded for fast viewing and users can download entire albums at 1,600-pixel resolution, large enough to make 4-by-6-inch prints, Graham said.

Meanwhile, Photobucket is set to announce on Wednesday the availability of the Photobucket Jwidget tool, a free plug-in that lets any Web site provide free image and video hosting for users. Photobucket offers free video and photo sharing and is designed to let users easily host images and videos and link them to social networks, auction sites, blogs and message boards.

Last week, Yahoo launched a limited beta of a new Yahoo Photos site that lets people download high-resolution photos, tag shots with descriptors for easy search, and comment on them. Yahoo also owns the Flickr photo site, which popularised photo tagging.

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

dabomb
27/06/2008 12:18 PM

  • 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.


  • Adobe embraces latest Canon, Nikon, Sony SLRs

  • Adobe After Effects CS4

  • Adobe Illustrator CS4

  • Adobe defends Aussie CS4 price hike

  • 101 software tips, tweaks and tricks

  • Adobe Photoshop CS4 Extended

  • Flickr revamp spotlights photos, social features

  • Google adds Android app for Flickr photos

  • Revamped Google Picasa site identifies photo faces

More articles »

Find the right software

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    • 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.

    • Adobe Photoshop Express Beta

      Adobe Photoshop Express Beta

      Though there's a lot to like about Adobe's first stab at online photo editing and sharing, you probably want to wait until the company fixes a few problems with the beta — and defangs its terms of service — before uploading scads of photos to Adobe Photoshop Express.

    More reviews »

    Membership benefits

    Win prizes and other promotion benefits

    Win prizes and other promotion benefits

    As a CNET.com.au member, you're eligible to enter and win any prizes on our site. Sign up for a free CNET.com.au membership now!