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RECENTLY I WROTE:
- A quick trip back to Sorrento
- Vimeo relaunches with new features
- You wait for a bus…
- The miniature world of London commuters
- Some sound advice
- LCDVF: an entry-level viewfinder for DSLR film-makers
- Time for a refresh
- Google+ gets a new lightbox
- Hampshire frozen in time (capsule)
- What the new Canon C300 can do
favourites
Archives
My Twitter updates
- The Incredible Shrinking New York Times http://t.co/34jzZ9sC posted 2 minutes ago
- Woman's infected jaw removed, 3D printed replacement implanted http://t.co/J6RYwHyE posted 5 minutes ago
- RT @nat_bur: RT @Alan_Machnik: Best. Snowman. Ever. http://t.co/kpdybiLh posted 8 minutes ago
- Broken boiler update: +12 in the bedroom overnight. BUT my woollen hat can also be used as an eye mask, so all is good. posted 1 hour ago
- RT @the99percent: The Counter-Intuitive Benefits of Small Time Blocks - http://t.co/xvbJR0lo #recent99 posted 18 hours ago
- So, whose Pinterest boards are worth following? posted 18 hours ago
photography
multimedia and photojournalism
Me on Flickr
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Tag Archives: facebook
People in photos – Flickr's new function
Do you remember what you felt every time you realised your friend had tagged a picture of you on Facebook? And do you remember how you felt when you couldn’t do anything about it?
Luckily Facebook later added a bit of new functionality, which meant you could untag yourself.
And luckily Flickr has learned from Facebook’s initial cock-up. Its newest function is called “People in photos” and – much like its Facebook equivalent – allows you to tag someone by typing their name or drawing a box around their face and adding their name.
Luckily, the fact that you’ve done it will display in their Recent Activity stream, so they’ll be able to remove yourself from the photo. What’s more, once you remove yourself from an image, only you will be able to tag yourself in that image again. Nice touch.
Obviously, you can now set your preferences and define who, if anyone, can tag you.
Flickr has also updated the layout of your profile page, which now also features all the images, in which you’ve been tagged. There are also your favourites from other people’s photostreams.
Privately I will not be using the new tagging function at all – I’ve never used it on Facebook either. But if you’re using Flickr to share your entire social life (and many of us do), this will come useful.
Until, that is, someone tags that super-uncool picture of you from last year’s work’s Christmas do.












