Photomatic
photomaticapp.comDoes anyone find it weird that a "Show HN" kind of lacks on the "Show" aspect.
All the site really has is a beta signup button and one screenshot. I personally don't want to give you any information (including my email) for something I barely understand or see.
I understand this is SOP for startups - put up a form, start getting emails, start making money, then at some point down the road maybe actually offer a minimally viable product.
But a "Show HN" to me should definitely include more than this, I believe. The audience for these threads isn't potential customers but fellow programmers, hackers and entrepreneurs.
Correct. Show HN is for something you've made that people can play with. Landing pages, email signups, and fundraisers aren't things people can play with, so we edit "Show HN" out in such cases.
For example, instead of an email signup, Show HN is for the thing you email people about once it's ready; instead of a fundraiser, Show HN is for what you build with the funds you raise; and so on.
Agreed. I haven't been tuned-in long enough to know, but have any companies tried landing pages (or similar) offering an "exclusive" first look at a product via a Show HN link?
I wonder what the community response to something like that might be. I know I'd personally appreciate a company taking the time to put it together, particularly if they tout the "hacking" aspects of the product or how it came about.
I can't remember if it was on HN or DN, but I have seen exclusive access to a site for readers recently.
Agreeing with all that has already been said and the fact that it lacks a product or something to test, even the descriptions are very vague.
"Amazing photo albums created from all of your photos automatically - it's the best photo organizer ever made."
What photo albums? Facebook? From my hard drive?
"Never worry about your photos again. You can choose what albums to backup..."
Where? In a cloud infrastructure you own and manage or within one of my own existing backup solutions?
Ok you want to collect signups for a beta, fine. But at least have a video, thorough descriptions, about us, mission statement, links to press etc.
I hate to "me too", but I agree with all of the comments so far. There is simply too little there to "show" me anything, and too little to make me want to go any further.
HN needs a way to upvote a whole bunch of comments without all the tedious clicking. Or a way of indicating that the comments are worthy, the original topic of discussion is not (and therefore not worthy of upvoting).
I don't want to detract from this team or anything, because this looks very pretty and well done. But on the other hand, I have to ask... Do we really need another photo organizer? I'm an amateur photographer, and I take a ton of photos, but I rarely need anything better than Flickr or Dropbox or even a Facebook photo album. What's the selling point for "a better photo organizer"? Is this a pain point that's big enough to justify this kind of time and energy investment? Or is a "photo organizer" app the new to-do app for showing off mobile design skills?
Aren't there more pressing problems to solve out there?
(Not trying to be snarky, btw. Just kinda thinking out loud. I fully support the developers' ability and right to build whatever they want. I just kinda think this is a first-world problem that has already been solved to death.)
Alright, so Google image search is cool right? Imagine if you could do that with your own photos without tagging and such... I want to find pictures of my dog so I search "dog". Or I want to send my mom all the pictures from my vacation so I search "puerto vallarta" and share the album it creates. There's a lot of cool stuff left to do at the intersection of image processing and photo collections. I'm all for parties other than Google working on problems like this. This app looks like the first stab at an MVP in that domain.
Right, so I agree with you that it's cool. What I'm getting at though is... is it necessary? Wouldn't all of your vacation photos be roughly in the same spot, since you took them at the same time and presumably put them in the same album? (The dog example is more compelling, but you get my point.)
Is this a problem worth solving? It just seems to me like it's more of a solution in search of a problem -- and photo management is largely a very solved problem. The number of people who have so many photos that they can't sort through them quickly is probably really low. The entities that would get the most out of this kind of technology are places like Facebook and Google.
Put another way: is releasing a photo management app into a market flooded with photo organization apps worth the time, money, and effort put into it? Are there other equally cool problems out there that are actually problems that need to be solved in markets that are not saturated at all?
My go-to example of something like this is something I heard at SF Nerd Nite (http://sf.nerdnite.com) where one non-profit is using drones to help farmers manage their huge tracts of land. That sounds like a really cool solution to a startlingly common problem in that industry. Right now, farmers tend to have to go out in person and spot-check parts of their fields, but there's no way for them to get a detailed look at everything really fast... that's where drones come in. They fly over, snap hi-res photos of the fields, and then bring them up on the computer screen -- all while the farmer is making coffee and eating breakfast.
So I mean -- and again just from a thinking out loud standpoint, because I totally get how cool Photomatic is from an image processing standpoint -- what I'm trying to get at is... does the world need yet another photo organizing app? Is this really what we think the world (or even the tech industry, or even the mobile app industry) needs?
Maybe it is. Maybe not.
I understand how this is cool and how it could be useful, though, and I totally agree that it would be great if someone besides Google/FB could develop something like this... and then hold out and not get bought by those companies.
Finally, just in case it's not 100% clear, I'm not picking on Photomatic. It really does look very well done and I'm definitely impressed with the tech behind it. I'm really thinking more along the lines of most of the stuff I see on Show HN. The vast majority of the apps on Show HN are what I call "first-world solutions." That is, they're for problems that I don't really think are epic problems. Yeah, okay, so maybe we can organize photos a bit better, or maybe the to-do app really is the worst way to manage something, or maybe there just isn't a perfect invoicing system out there.
But at the end of the day, millions upon millions of people out there manage their photos just fine, get things done just fine, and invoice customers just fine without a shiny new app. So, other than as a learning exercise or portfolio piece, why bother? Why not invest that time and money and energy into solving something that truly stymies people, inhibits progress, and prevents mankind from reaching ever greater heights? (Which, incidentally, would double as both a learning exercise and a portfolio piece, while also "saving the world".)
Anyway, those are my thoughts. Hope I don't offend too many people.
P.S. Thanks for a serious answer. :)
Yeah, I completely agree that organizing consumer photo albums is not the biggest problem. However, what I'm trying to say is that (consciously or not) Photomatic found a viable (looking) way to work on basic research problems in computer vision. And as you mention, the technology could have much broader applications if it makes enough money and gets enough users so that is can be developed and scaled.
The drone company you're talking about faces at least 3 large problems that need solutions before they can make their first dollar of profit: 1) drone automation, 2) image processing, 3) customer education. That's going to take a lot of upfront investment. I'd go as far as to say that the photo organization app solves a proper subset of the drone farming app you describe.
All I'm saying is that I think you should hold judgement when a relatively boring application is solving some pretty hard problems under the hood. Often the application is boring because it's a low-risk vehicle to work on good problems. I'm of the opinion that a lot of really valuable technology (like valuable to humanity) is being developed under the guise of social networking and Apps. For me (for now at least), whether the apps are truly great art or revolutionary tools is a tertiary concern to making progress on and directing funding towards the more basic research problems that they're based on.
Photo organizing is still an unsolved problem, so yes.
I disagree. Millions upon millions of people organize their photos just fine using existing tools every day. It's largely a solved problem. Is it inefficient? Maybe. Is it clunky? Possibly. But your average person does not have a problem with organizing photos.
You'll have to do a little better than say "it's not solved" to prove your point to me. Not that you need to prove anything to me. As I said, I'm just thinking out loud.
> Amazing photo albums created from all of your photos automatically - it's the best photo organizer ever made.
Ok..? Should I just take your word for it? Got a demo of the organizer up somewhere? I must be missing something.
If it's just an app, I guess there won't be much integration with OSX and web clients ? e.g. a way to integrate a massive amount of already existing photos that won't be on the phone. Or add the new photos taken from time to time with a DSLR, or integrate with Lightroom or other photo management applications.
While thre's not much details available, it brings a lot of (perhaps undue) sceptism from the start.
The 4 features that are mentioned on the front page, do not differ from the features already provided by the default Photo App.
> it's the best photo organizer ever made
Perhaps you should elaborate on that, or at least provide a visual demonstration.