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Beyond Pinterest and Instagram - Ten visual social networks that should be on your radar July 2012 (by @dirktherabbit) Beyond Pinterest and Instagram - Ten visual social networks that should be on your radar At Rabbit, we’ve written a lot recently about the growth of the visual web - how the big social media success stories of 2011/2012 were visual, and how imagery is becoming more important online. I summarised the trend in a webinar presentationI did for EyeFor Travel (link here) However, though Pinterest, Tumblr and Instagram have grabbed the headlines, which ones should you look out for next? I`ve listed the ten I`ve had some exposure to over the past six months. Sure, not all of them will be a success. Some will be though, and they are worth keeping on your radar. 1 - Jux Less than a year old, Jux was called "the most beautiful blog platform yet" by The Next Web at launch and I agree. Think of it as an even more visual and better looking alternative to Tumblr, with a lot of the same functionality (repost articles, follow other users). Jux has quickly become a Rabbit favourite, with some of us (for instance catturner.jux.com greenwicholympicdiary.jux.com) having recently created personal sites. Jux boss Ted Metcalfe is adding features all the time to improve the functionality, so this is definitely one to start to get to grips with and thinking about what you can use it for. Like Tumblr, the process of signing up and posting takes minutes. 2 - Tadaa I wrote about Tadaa the other month, it`s one of a series of photo-sharing mobile networks that could on the surface of it be considered Instagram competitors. However founder Niko Schoppmeier`s aim isn`t to compete with Instagram on numbers, which he can never win. Instead, it is to create a network for mobile photographers who really take pride in the quality of their content - think Vimeo vs YouTube. Tadaa recently went through an upgrade adding more filters and features. I think its a better `product` than Instagram with better features and filters. What it`s lacking at the moment is basic community features such as the ability to group images by hash-tag and the ability to call out someone publicly through @. The fact that Instagram lifted both of these conventions from Twitter proved to be crucial to its success. However, unlike Instagram you can post an image and ask other users to post images in reply - most challenges and contests on Tadaa are run like this. 3 - EyeEm Like Tadaa, EyeEm is a German-based company. While Tadaa is iOS only, and Instagram is iOS / Android, EyeEm is a good option for Windows Phone users. Its a service I very much like and have started using personally. I also think its got a lot going for it, with attractive product features. For example, it gives you the option of filling out your caption and location for you, which is a nice touch if you are stuck with what to add. The interface looks good, you can call out other users through the @, and though there are no hash-tags as yet, you can instead create albums around any location or activity. Once you`ve done this, any other user can add photos to that album. EyeEm seems to be taking a similar approach to Tadaa in differentiating itself in being a higher end network for mobile photo enthusiasts. Having said that, Britain`s Race for Life charity recently chose EyeEm in preference to Instagram for its high profile event. 4 - 500px (http://500px.com/why) If Tadaa wants to be the high end Instagram, Toronto-based start-up 500px wants to be the high-end Flickr. The Sydney Morning Herald describes it as being "home to some of the most amazing photos in the World" Like Flickr, free membership will get you a certain amount of functionality (10 uploads a week), while paid for accounts start at $19.95. Recently 500px acquired another Canadian company Algo Anywhere, with the aim of integrating its recommendation system into the site. The fact that 500px was able to shell out $2 million on this implies a certain level of deep pockets. 5 - Cowbird Cowbird is in theory invitation only. It is not a photo or video sharing service, instead it is a story-telling site with added multi-media. Or rather, as Cowbird puts it, it is designed to become a "public library for human experiences." Cowbird doesn`t actually allow video as founder Jonathan Harris says a video is a story in its own right. It does encourage photos and sound. 6 - Storywheel Like Cowbird, Storywheel is all about (as the name says) the story. Anyone actually old enough to remember pre-PC age picture slide-shows will immediately get the concept. Storywheel is the creation of Soundcloud, the growing social network that aims to become the YouTube of audio. You upload a series of Instagram photos together, and then turn them into a narrated slide-show. ... - tailieumienphi.vn
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