Flickr on changing directions 3

Posted by Pelle Mon, 08 Aug 2005 07:06:00 GMT

Interesting inteview at Adaptive Path with Flickr’s Eric Costello about how Flickr ended up going down the photo sharing path and away from their original idea for an online game.

The first early version was really a chat site…

It wasn’t a photo sharing site, so much as it was a place where you could go to chat and talk about photos. But none of that activity was stored in any asynchronous way – there were no Web pages that hosted the conversations people were having about photos, it was all just real-time.

Later on they started adding asynchronous featureas as he call it like web pages, comments and tagging…

As we started adding features to the site itself, like pages that hosted the photos so that people could visit them at a unique URL, we had a lot more success with that. People responded to it, and the site began to grow. So our energies tended to be dedicated toward enhancing that aspect of the site.

It’s a great lesson that sometimes it’s important to follow the users. PayPal started like this as well. The original protype as demonstrated to me on a beach in Anguilla by Max Levchin in 98 or was it 99 (can’t remember which) was a Palm application, where you could beam money to each other for say splitting a restaurant tab. Within a year they had moved to what we now know and love as PayPal.

I have done this myself on many projects. I started doing CaribWeb as a Caribbean tourist portal back in 94, however the discussion forums TravelTalk took a life of themselves and lived on for a good 5 years after I shut the rest down. Making me a fair bit in advertising revenue throughout the years.

Create a simple NDA with zero legalese in no time at all and for free at our service Agree2.

Trackbacks

Use the following link to trackback from your own site:
http://stakeventures.com/articles/trackback/59

Comments

Leave a response

  1. Avatar
    Jens-Olaf Tue Aug 16 11:19:38 +0000 2005

    All these blogging things are still new to me. I`ve seen Flickr at Ross Mayfield´s blog first time. Then I received the fotos of a WWI veteran and wanted to add it to our blog. The fotos were unpublished until then and I wanted to have a free archive with tags that someone looking for WWI fotos could find them. It´s good to oranize all of them in a set, only one url is needed. It is comfortable to leave comments to each foto. So far the best software for such a purpose I´ve seen.

  2. Avatar
    Jens-Olaf Tue Nov 01 00:03:35 +0000 2005

    And now someone have send the url to boingboing, in one week the set has been viewed from 50 to 50 000, never thought about that this could happen. The fotos can be found worldwide, besides this there is a lot of communication aming flickr users, also the comments.

  3. Avatar
    Pelle Tue Nov 01 02:05:33 +0000 2005

    they are amazing by the way. I myself have sent them on to history interested friends.

Comments

(sorry javascript required)