I am finally setting up my very own blog. Who knew...just a few years ago the term "blog" meant nothing to me. While I knew it had to do with internet postings, I figured it was only for those computer savvy people out there. Fast forward to present time, and you find me addicted to no less than five blogs which I read religiously and cry when they're not updated regularly.
7.15.2007
flickr.
I was playing around on flickr to see if there was any way to import my photostream into my blog (I don't think there is) and I checked out the popularity section for fun. It organizes your photos by popularity within four categories- views, favorites (people can "favorite" one of your pictures, and this organizes them according to the most "favorited" first), comments (obviously the ones with the most comments would be at the top here), and finally, interestingness. I don't get this one. How can flickr tell which of my 935 photos are the most interesting. It looks like it takes in account how many times a picture's been "favorited," but that's it. Some of the ones at the top haven't even been viewed yet, while ones below them have been viewed a ton. Someone, please enlighten me here.
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3 comments:
I think it's some combination of views, comments, being marked as a favorite, and maybe notes. I think the idea is that each of those is a more or less significant contributor (a view makes it marginally more interesting, a comment more so, and being a favorite makes it significantly more so.)
It definitely only works if your photostream gets viewed quite a bit. I assume it's only really meaningful for the streams of photographers who get hundreds or thousands of views of each photo. Certainly it's never been very meaningful for my photos.
Hey-- you can make a "badge" http://www.flickr.com/badge.gne
Thanks And! It's in already!
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