Get all the photos your friends took with you, forward and backwards in time.
blog.bu.mpFlock was a web browser until last year: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flock_(web_browser)
I know there are only so many names, but in this case both flocks are social apps, tracking updated photos between friends.
I wonder if Zynga (the owners of flock.com now) will have anything to say about this, though I find it hard to imagine it hasn't already been discussed.
Flock uses new battery-friendly location technology and
sophisticated algorithms to magically know which of your
Facebook friends you are with when photos are taken.
My bet is that they're using the background significant location change service. Each time iOS wakes the app with a significant location change notification, Flock combs through your photos and sends their GPS coordinates from the EXIF data to the Flock servers.What I'm really concerned about, though, is that to pull this off the app must send your location to the Flock servers for correlation with other users' photo locations. This means Bump now has a reasonably accurate location log for everyone using the Flock app.
I wrote a test app for the iOS significant location change service that logged my location for a week, and it was surprisingly accurate. Enough to clearly tell when I was at work, at home, driving down the freeway, etc.: http://www.tomjstokes.com/130/iphone-ios-4-2-background-loca...
I wish there was a way for ordinary hackers to work on electric airplanes, space shuttles, or robots on the side rather than photo sharing apps.
Flock math department here. Robots are software-limited, and Flock has more overlap with robotics on the software side than people might think. At Bump we have been writing software to exchange bits of stuff between computers that 50% of the population has attached to their bodies. Flock is actively making decisions for the human based on situational awareness. The machine learning and statistical techniques we are using are the same ones that are being using in robotics for e.g. situational awareness and path/task planning.
If anyone out there is interested in being a developer in my group and is handy with algorithms and fast data stores e.g. Redis, ideally in production, email me.
Solar airplane: http://solarimpulse.com/en/timestop/job-offer/
Space ship: http://www.spacex.com/careers.php
Robots: http://www.willowgarage.com/pages/jobs
We are hiring also: http://bu.mp/company/jobs
I only bring it up because in the first paragraph you said it started as a side project. I apologize for my comment though, this was a bad thread to post it.
My original point though, was that sometimes I feel like we make these apps, because that's what we're capable of making by ourselves. The links you posted are great opportunities for what we can do together. But I think there's still a large opportunity out there. Think about how many people actually completed the Stanford AI course. I think it was something close to 20k. There's a HUGE amount of people who have day jobs, but have the potential to do BIG things on the side. Except they're all off on their own, so they build iphone apps.
I'm starting to get an idea here :D
I think you'd touch a lot more lives if you worked on solving the photo sharing problem for 3 years than working on electric airplanes for 3 years. Also: your comment is rude.
See diydrones.com -- lots of ordinary hackers making extraordinary things. By the way, the people at bump do it by choice I'm sure. No one's forcing them to make a photo sharing app. :)
How will this be any different than the shared photo albums built-in to iOS6? Granted, I have not had the pleasure of using Flock or iOS6 - so this is not a rhetorical question.
The two problems we see with getting all the photos your friends took with you are 1) you have to remember to share and whom you want to share with and 2) its a pain to share them all with just a couple people (and have their photos added as well). We think all that work is what prevents us from getting all the photos our friends took with us.
With shared photo albums on iOS6 it will be really easy to share a set of photos on your phone. It will not remind you to share and it will not consolidate everyone's photos into a single album.
Watch the Flock video to see how this works: http://vimeo.com/46398388
With Flock you just use any camera app as you normally would and when you leave the event Flock gives you a 1-touch page (not automatic, users still have control) of what to share and with whom.
"Flock is not just a brand new app; we see it as a brand new kind of app. While most apps today jockey for our ever-dwindling time and attention, attempting to become one of the apps that we think about the most, Flock is different. We designed Flock so you don't have to think about it at all."
Great quote that really stands out after downloading the app. Fiancee and I are going to give it a try this weekend with some friends. I'm assuming, now that I've used it for a few hours, that it combines location AND time to make a best guess on what an event was. Very cool.
One thing that would be nice is to block out a certain location. For instance, we both take a ton of pictures at our house on a daily basis. For me, it's pictures of delicious things I'm pulling off the Big Green Egg. For her, it's pictures of our dog and her freshly-painted nails.
However, the instant combination of our travel photos earned a phone call from said fiancee. She loves it. Big props.
Great video.
I've been using this app in beta for a while and it is so awesome. I really think this follows a new design pattern for mobile where the app is so smart it pings you when you should use it.
forward in time? Break ALL the causality.
"Here are the photos of you dancing at the party next week. Do you still want to go?"
In-app purchase: dance lessons
Somewhat unrelated tip: The font on this blog is too small. I just measured and it is taking up only 20% of my screen.
I'd suggest a bigger font to make it more readable. Over 85% of people use a screen bigger than 1024x768 [1]. Take advantage of that. :)
Over 85% of w3schools.com users have a screen bigger than 1024x768. Most people have never been to w3schools.
I'm pretty sure their survey data comes from lots of websites, not just theirs.
I'm pretty sure you haven't read the statements right before the table:
W3Schools.com is for people with an interest for web technologies. This fact indicates that the figures below might not be 100% true for the average internet users. (...) Anyway, our data, collected from W3Schools' log-files over ten years, clearly shows the long term trends.
But if you're not convinced, you can read in their forums:
http://w3schools.invisionzone.com/index.php?showtopic=35566- The w3schools Browser and OS statistics are based on the data collected over the w3schools site or do have more sources? - Only the W3Schools site.By the way: http://w3fools.com/
I concede the point. I'm definitely wrong.
This, finally, is the fourth paragraph:
Flock finds the photos you take together with family and friends and magically brings all the photos from each person's phone together into a single shared album.
At least it stands alone, making it somewhat more (quickly) identifiable.
And such formulation (as in this comment, by the way) is what is known as "burying the lede". [1]
I mention it because I'm getting rather tired of not just blog posts but also essays, news articles, and even marketing copy (which the OP could also be considered), that makes me read 200, 300, or 500 words before I learn what they are talking about.
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How is this different from popset?
It has a different name, is made by different people, the two apps have entirely different feature-sets and focus, etc
Both have the same value proposition. Flock has far clearer messaging.