Listen to this Podcast--> http://www.odeo.com/episodes/1460333-Flickr-Fun
Photo sharing websites have been around since the 90s, but it took a small startup site called Flickr to catapult the idea of “sharing” into a full blown online community. Within the past couple of years Flickr has become the fastest growing photo sharing site on the web and is known as one of the first websites to use keyword “tags” to create associations and connections between photos and users of the site.
For this discovery exercise, you are asked to take a good look at Flickr and discover what this site has to offer. Find out how tags work, what groups are, and all the neat things that people and other libraries (list also here) are using Flickr for.
Discovery Resources:
- Flickr Learn More tour (6 steps)
- Mediamazine Flickr Tutorials
- Flickr Services (3rd party applications & mashups)
- and let’s not forget to look at some other libraries on Flickr.
Discovery Exercise:
In this discovery exercise, you have two options…
- Take a good look around Flickr and discover an interesting image that you want to blog about. Be sure to include either a link to the image or you can use Flickr's blogging tool to add the image in your post.
- If you have access to a digital camera you might like to create a flickr account and upload a picture to flickr. If you want to do this but don't have access to any digital images let Dale know, she will loan you some of hers.
To upload a photo
First save your photo to your computer (or USB).- Go to the flickr website at http://www.flickr.com/
- Create and account/sign in.
- Click on upload photos.
- Click on browse and locate where you have saved your photo (you can upload more than one photo at once).
- You can add tags describing your photo at the bottom of the page.
- Click upload to complete the process.
You might also like to take a look at the Picture Australia website
Click on the flickr icon on the front page and you will be led to a display of images the National Library have used from flickr.This is part of the National Library's vision of building a comprehensive pictorial record of Australian history. You may also like to view the media release from the National Library about this collaborative project.
Other photosharing and photography websites include www.snap.com, www.fotolia.com, www. slide.com, and www.dumpr.net.
Don't forget to label this post on your blog #5 flickr and talk about what you have learned doing this activity.
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