ReadWriteWeb

How to Rock Flickr Like a Champ

Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick / August 28, 2008 5:32 PM / 23 Comments

Yahoo's wildly popular photo sharing site Flickr is a lot of fun to use, but it really helps to take some time and learn how to use it well. We've recently engaged more seriously with Flickr and wanted to share some quick tips that we think will help you get more out of it, too.

Some people want to know how to do marketing on Flickr or use Flickr in nonprofit organizations, but in this post we're going to talk about ways you can enjoy the Flickr more for any purpose.

Set Up Publishing By Phone

The single biggest factor in changing our relationship with Flickr has been taking the time to set up publishing for photos taken by mobile phone. It's really quite easy. Just go to the email tab in your Flickr account and make note of the unique email address for you to post. Then pick up your phone, create a new contact named Flickr and enter that email for the contact.

Now take a photo and send it by MMS (Multimedia Message Service) to your buddy Flickr. Like magic, that photo will be published to your Flickr account. The subject line of the email will be the title, any text in the body will be a description. Knock yourself out, it's super fun. I don't know why it took us so long to figure out how this works, but we're betting that many of you haven't yet either.

Turn on Creative Commons Licensing

It's easy to turn the default setting for new photos uploaded to Creative Commons Attribution (our favorite) by visiting the Privacy & Permissions tab in your account. Unfortunately there's not clear, working links from Flickr to an explanation of the different licenses. Here they are on the Creative Commons site.

CC Attribution is a license that says other people can use it and change it, including in a commercial context, as long as they give you attribution as the creator. It greases the wheels for quick and easy media sharing. That's good and it would be nice if more quality media was licensed this way. We keep a link to the Creative Commons by Attribution search on Flickr in our browser toolbar and use it frequently for photos in posts. Those could be your photos we and others are using!

Video about the theory of Creative Commons

Take Even Better Photos

Attendees of the Gnomedex conference this year (which was a huge home run, by the way) were treated to an opening session with photographer Kris Krug about how to take better photos. That session isn't available yet in video, but Krug is a fun guy to pay attention to. Other popular photography bloggers worth checking out for inspiration and occasional instruction include Thomas Hawk (see his January post Top 10 Hacks on Flickr), Scott Beale (one of our 10 favorite sources for finding wonderful things), Epic Edits (see their post Five Fantastic Flickr Photographers), Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir and Jeremy Cowart. We're sure readers here can share some more good ones.

Those folks are all fancy pants, though, and many of us just want to have fun posting photos from our phones. Check out this handy 5 minute video from VideoJug about how to take better mobile phone photos. Thanks go to Amit Agarwal again for posting this one last year. We're excited to try out some of these tips.

Share Screen Shots

Another way we've been using Flickr lately has been to share screen shots of interesting things we find online. Some of us here at RWW use Jing for this, others use the beautiful Mac app Skitch.

People like interesting screen shots and these apps make it really easy to shoot them up to your Flickr account with just a click. The reigning king of this practice right now is Chris Messina, but you don't have to be a super-early adopter to make screen shots on Flickr useful. Skitch makes annotation easy as well and sharing annotated screen shots is a great way to explain things to people.

Video demonstration of Skitch.com.

Turn on Your Grease Monkey

We use a number of Grease Monkey scripts that enhance the Flickr experience. If you aren't familiar with Grease Monkey, you must learn about it because it's great. See our recent post How to Start Using GreaseMonkey in Under 5 Minutes. Specifically, we use:

  • FlickrPM puts links to viewing and profile options in all the right places, where they aren't right now on Flickr.

  • GreasedLightbox sets up real quick little image slide shows from almost any page. It can also be a pain to use when you're on Flickr, to tell the truth. It works better on Ffffound, which is another great site if you like imagery.

  • AutoPagerize lets you zip through page after page of Flickr photos with no clicking or page load delays.

What are your favorite GreaseMonkey scripts for Flickr?

Use a Bulk Uploader

Grabbing a whole bunch of photos from your computer and putting them on Flickr is easier than you might think. We think Flickr's own bulk uploader is fun to use. Thomas Hawk prefers JUploadr.

GeoTag Your Photos

Did you know you can open a drop-down menu in the Flickr search box and search by location? You can also go directly to http://flickr.com/map and search by location. Flickr, all of Yahoo really, does a great job understanding location data - but you've got to play to win, you know? Many people (ourselves, for example) have never found geotagging on Flickr very easy to do.

Enter this awesome bookmarklet from startup Loc.alize.us. It makes geotagging your photos super easy, if not downright fun. You can increase your discoverability, participate in the geotagging scene and feel smarter by grabbing that bookmarklet, renaming it in your browser toolbar and then going to town. Which town? You'll be surprised by the sophistication of Flickr's comprehension of location information.

beachgeotag.jpg

Follow the Flickr Blog To Keep Up to Date

Flickr has a really active community and thriving forums, but subscribing to the company blog is a good idea to stay up to date with new features. If you don't want to read all the entries there, and some of them are more important than others, then consider subscribing to just the highly discussed posts from the company.

Have Fun Off-site

It's not just on Flickr itself that you can have fun with your posted photos.

Last week Flickr released a handy slide show tool for embedding slide shows of your or any photos on a blog or social network.

There are lots of great ways to visualize Flickr photos by tag, but Tag Galaxy will probably knock your socks off if you haven't seen it before.

Turning on Flickr sharing in FriendFeed is a great way to bring more of your friends into the photo part of your life. You can hook up with the RWW staff's personal FriendFeed accounts here if you'd like to see our photos and other activities.

RWWonFlickrFF.png

Dave Winer's FlickrFan is a screen saver slide show of Flickr photos from you, your friends and some important international news agencies. It can be a little tricky to set up but it's a lot of fun to use.

If you're coocoo for cocoa puffs over these kinds of tools in general, check out this long, long list of Flickr tools from QuickOnlineTips.com.

How do You Like to Use Flickr?

These are some of our favorite tips for using Flickr but we're sure many of our readers can suggest even more. Flickr is a canonical service in the Web 2.0 world. It's really worth spending some more time with. With less time than it took you to read this whole article, we think you can set up some systems that will make Flickr a much more enjoyable part of your life.

Comments

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  1. Great article and excellent tips ..

    I use www.flickriver.com to view loads of flickr images ...

    www.flickrleech.com for my Interestingness fix ...

    Also not mentioned ,,
    http://flickrslidr.com/


    JP
    www.hamiltonflickrgroup.com

    Posted by: John Piercy | August 28, 2008 6:07 PM



  2. all the best GM scripts are here

    http://steeev.freehostia.com/flickr/

    Flickr - Multi Group Sender my fav ...

    and
    FlickrPM Updated! 21/5/2008 :- A GM script that adds easily accessible icon links to a users Email, Favourites, Flickr Inspector, Flickr Scout, Flickr Leech, most Interesting photos, Photo Archive and Profile, next to their usernames in forums and photo comments.

    Posted by: John Piercy | August 28, 2008 6:11 PM



  3. great article , left some comments .. on the blog

    Posted by: johnpiercy Posted on FriendFeed   | August 28, 2008 6:12 PM



  4. Excellent tips!

    Here are a listing of flickr tutorials:
    http://www.newwebplatform.com/tips-and-tutorials/Flickr

    Posted by: NewWebPlatform | August 28, 2008 6:33 PM



  5. We've Included two tools for Flickr that allow you to search for Flickr photo's from your browser.
    (click on the "add to your browser" button on each post)

    1. Standard Flickr Browser Search:
    http://thelist.addoursearch.com/2008/07/flickrcom-search-plugin-for-the-popular-photo-site/

    2. Picitup Search
    http://thelist.addoursearch.com/2008/08/picitupcom-search-images-by-content/

    Picitup is a really interesting tool. It allows you to visually search flickr for visual elements such as colors, shapes, layout and size.

    Posted by: Troy Peterson | August 28, 2008 7:30 PM



  6. We used screen shots on Flickr to market http://www.happytutors.com, which was an interesting experiment we did when we launched HappyTutors.com.

    We also host all our images on Flickr too, which is very convernient and user-friendly.

    HappyTutors.com
    ~ Connect Tutors with Students & Parents ~

    Posted by: HappyTutors.com - Connect Tutors with Students & Parents | August 28, 2008 8:17 PM



  7. compfight is boss when trying to search flickr for CC imageshttp://www.compfight.com/


    Posted by: Cawlin | August 28, 2008 8:47 PM



  8. I'm addicted to Flickr! Great comprehensive post... I have much to learn. Thanks for this one!

    Posted by: Betsy Weber Posted on FriendFeed   | August 28, 2008 8:50 PM



  9. this article is a start. would like to all see one that really digs into how to tag photos (suggestions for popular tags like 'colorful' / 'panoramic') and groups to share your photos. this is another way to bring in additional comments and flow to your photos. this article is a start, but we need the missing manual for flickr.

    Posted by: Jeff Sandquist Posted on FriendFeed   | August 28, 2008 9:16 PM



  10. One little trick I use is to upload every single photo I take at full res and only make the good ones public...

    Posted by: Duncan | August 28, 2008 9:41 PM



  11. Jeff, missing manual for Flickr is a great idea. Wonder if someone's written something like that.

    Posted by: Marshall Kirkpatrick Posted on FriendFeed   | August 28, 2008 10:03 PM



  12. I just wrote the longest comment I've ever written, but I had to sign up for a fucking passkey, and my detailed comment and questions are lost. My head is pounding, because the "fucking" passkey profile wouldn't update(tried it three times). Sorry I'm really pissed off, but most of all I wanted your help, and I need some aspirin! I'll Try Back.

    Mike

    Posted by: michaelfidler | August 28, 2008 11:20 PM



  13. Tips were good.But for marketing purpose, Flickr may not serve really great.

    Posted by: Prashant | August 28, 2008 11:44 PM



  14. Another good tool for your mobile phone Shozu. This lets me send every photo to flickr with one click (as well as sending them lots of other places as well if you want). It uses data instead of MMS, so only for some users.

    Posted by: Rachel Clarke | August 29, 2008 12:41 AM



  15. All I'd add is that in your 'Take Even Better Photos' you really should add Darren Rowse's Digital Photography School - it's a stella site with amazing teaching day after day.

    Posted by: Grant Hopkins | August 29, 2008 6:22 AM



  16. CoolIris (formerly PicLens) is an awesome way to browse photos in Flickr. It is like something from the future.

    Posted by: Andy Roth Posted on FriendFeed   | August 29, 2008 11:29 AM



  17. If you're posting screenshots, use the non-intuitive "flag your photo" link to tag it as a screenshot. That way if people are searching for screenshots it's easier to limit a search to that kind of thing.

    Posted by: jenjen | August 29, 2008 1:57 PM



  18. I think http://fiveprime.org/flickr_hvmnd.cgi is by far the best flickr image surfer.

    Posted by: Paul Ryan | August 30, 2008 7:50 PM



  19. I like the idea of getting better results from Flickr and having more creative commons photos.

    The videojug guy pointed out some basic stuff on better photo quality but still a good reminder

    Posted by: alexander - social media user | August 30, 2008 9:09 PM



  20. Kris Krug's photo tips (and the rest of the Gnomedex vids) are available on Ustream:

    Kris Krug Pt. 1 http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/654356
    Kris Krug Pt 2 http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/654372

    Hopefully, they'll be on YouTube soon, too.

    Posted by: Stuart Maxwell | August 31, 2008 10:28 AM



  21. Really good tips, and some good comments... ;-)

    I recently found a very interesting tool to enhance image search on flickr. It translates the search terms to several languages, which shows many more results than using just one language: www.flickrbabel.com.

    Posted by: Mario | September 2, 2008 6:25 AM



  22. I like Flickr, but I wish there was a way to embed an automatically list of Collections or Sets on my own site.

    I want to give visitors to my site a quick overview of all the different types of picture I'm taking, so that they can delve in if they have an interest.

    Maybe if they provided an RSS feed for Sets and Collections something could be done.

    Anyone else feel the same?

    Posted by: Andrew Shuttleworth Author Profile Page Posted on FriendFeed   | September 21, 2008 9:53 PM



  23. I found an answer to my above-mentioned quest for an RSS feed of my photosets in Flickr with this Yahoo! Pipe:

    http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.info?_id=YpOLjWfo2xGk_6VjX0sBXw

    Posted by: Andrew Shuttleworth Author Profile Page Posted on FriendFeed   | September 22, 2008 12:25 AM




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