Someone bought new servers.. Facebook Photos get 8 times larger
Well the start of October comes with a fresh announcement from Facebook, photos can be up to 8 times larger ! While Facebook may be a great place to share your photos with family and friends, an unfortunate downside is that it crushes your stunning images to a smidge of their original size. The size increase will now allow for photos of up to 720 pixels high and 2048 pixels wide, whichever comes first.
Where this feature will really make the most difference is viewing Facebook photos on large screens. Take the Facebook integration on the Xbox 360 for example, viewing images on a large HDTV will significantly benefit from the higher quality available. The downside is you’ll need to make sure you have a speedy internet connection to deal with all those extra bits.
Also Facebook points out in the uploader that using High Res can take up to 10x longer to upload.
Photo Viewer Improved
A short time ago Facebook made a change to photos that stopped with the pagination madness and allowed full albums to be viewed on one page just by scrolling down. Well now Facebook are taking photo album viewing a step further, adding a lightbox (see below) not only that, but they rewrote the way photos are switched from one to the next. This should result in much faster, more responsive photo viewing.
Tagging
Another important point in this announcement is a change to how people are tagged in photos. There will now be the ability to tag a person across multiple photos. Very handy when you have that friend that just won’t stop photobombing at birthday parties.
So what does this mean for services like Flickr, Zoomr and Smugmug ? It may impact them slightly, as the higher resolutions offered by those services is definitely a draw card. It is important to remember that Flickr actually stores the original file, so you get the full uncompressed image the way it came off your camera. So there is still quite a difference between Facebook photos and Flickr, but could it just be a matter of time before we no longer need Flickr ?
You can read the full blog post about higher quality photos over at Facebook.
2,000 followers, 14,000 tweets and why you should be on twitter

After joining twitter on February 5th, 2008, using the service has been one hell of a ride. Last week I clocked up 2,000 followers and pushed passed the 14,000th tweet, so I thought it was time to share my experience with twitter.
One the surface twitter is an unassuming simplistic service, with a 140 character limit on each post. Spend some time and delve a little deeper and you’ll discover a very advanced ecosystem. Twitter has much to offer, one of the most important is – The Link Economy. Posts may be restricted, but links allow readers to view get more information via websites, images and videos to escape the 140 character limit. Entire business models have been built off the fact that click throughs of these links can tracked to determine the effectiveness of a tweet.
Crowdsourcing
After spending some months posting technology tweets, the follower count began to grow, somewhere around the 1000 follower mark, something changed. Twitter was no longer just a real time information source, but rather a platform that allowed instant feedback of seemingly any question I had. As the follower count increases, the number of responses grows with it, twitter is now an invaluable source of information. What was expected was that I could find answers relating to tech, but what was surprising was that my followers also shared a lot of other topics, so regardless of the question, there’s usually someone who responds.
Networking
I’ve met some of the most amazing people not only in Australia’s technology industry, but from all over the world. Twitter is the ultimate social networking tool needed no introduction to contact people. Some of those relationships have developed to friendship offline as well and meetups and conferences have never been the same since twitter’s introduction.
Access to people
Twitter is being used by people like no other service. Just try and get in contact with the CEO of a company using traditional channels like phone or email. If you get any response at all, it’ll likely be 3 months later and be from the assistant’s assistant. Bizarrely top ranking personnel in companies or even celebrities are using twitter like no other service. Twitter allows for a direct connection to businesses, celebrities and service operators like nothing else.
3 screens and a cloud
Twitter have managed to pull the very strategy that technology giant Microsoft have been trying to achieve for years. There’s never been a shortage of ways to access and contribute to twitter, either by the web or dedicated applications. As far as device support, there’s twitter for your mobile phone, twitter for your desktop and even twitter on your TV.
Information Overload
Accept that information will pass you by. If you ever needed a way to realise that your human and can only absorb so much information, run the latest real-time TweetDeck app. Personally I run it on an additional 24 or 27” monitor and glance at from time to time throughout the day. Once you do accept that you can accept that some stuff will pass you buy, you’ll realise that if you choose who you follow carefully, you’ll see surfacing the important stuff for you (via Retweets).
Giving back
There’s plenty of benefits you can take from twitter, but one important aspect to remember is that you get what you give. I encourage everyone to actively contribute constructively to the conversation, providing help to other where you can and the internet can become a very powerful place.
So I encourage you all who aren’t on twitter, to try it out, stick with a while, and see if you can’t find great benefits in the service that I have.
Digg 4.0 gets all warm and friendly, still months away
In this publisher preview video above, Digg’s Founder and CEO Kevin Rose explains the upcoming features in version 4. The big change comes from the way the Digg system works. Currently you Digg stories up when you like them, if enough people do that they make it to the front page. That’s an oversimplification but you get the idea. In Digg v4 your homepage will be filled with a Facebook-style feed of what your friends are digging so if you haven’t got many friends on Digg, you better find some. There will be an transition or on-boarding process for existing users where you select people to follow from a suggested user list similar to that of Twitter.
Naturally there’s still going to be the Top News section that does feature the most popular stories Digg-wide, but the focus has certainly shifted to having your friends be the focus for surfacing new and exciting content.
For publishers (like techAU) we’ll have the ability to auto-publish an RSS feed to Digg, removing the hassle for end users to submit stories manually. While we’re on that topic of submissions, if you’ve ever submitted a story to Digg before, you’ll know it’s a fairly lengthy process. In Digg 4. 0 submissions will become a lot easier. Simply submit the link to the content you want to share, choose a thumbnail and category and your done. This simplification is sure to increase the amount of content submitted – smart move Digg.
At the end of the video Kevin says “there’ll be a lot more features we’ll talk about over the coming weeks and months”, so you could assume from that statement that we won’t be seeing the release of 4.0 for quite some time.
via TechCrunch
Facebook chat returns

After the privacy scare last week, Facebook disabled their chat feature. The “Preview My Profile” feature allowed some users Facebook chat sessions be able to be seen by others.
Good news for FB addicts, Facebook has re-enabled this feature. Go get your chat on.
Google Chrome OS announced, not released, take a breath.
Well, well, well.. Google’s certainly thrown the twitter/bloggersphere into a spin today, with the announcement of their own Desktop Operating System.
Whilst I understand that when a company the size of Google makes a move in a new direction, it’s going to attract attention and something we should pay attention. Because if done right, it could significantly impact the industry and millions of lives. However the reactions today were ridiculously disproportionate. I sat back and watched the tweets roll in, some referring to it as “Google drops a Bomb!” others referring to it as a “Windows killer”. If you want to see the hysteria, check out #Google OS.
Ultimately what we got today, is an exciting announcement for that has potential for the future. It’s important to remember that the success Google Chrome OS can only truly be determined once we get hands on with the OS. Early development builds are many months away and a consumer release (undoubtedly beta) is scheduled for mid-2010.
What’s different to current offerings? Well Google are taking different approach to constructing their Linux-based OS – “We’re designing the OS to be fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds. The user interface is minimal to stay out of your way, and most of the user experience takes place on the web.” This could also be interpreted as meaning the feature set will also be very limited.
What’s not reflected by Google’s comments, is the complexities that go into making an operating system, something that both Apple and Microsoft have had to deal with for the past 30 years. How Google will make an OS so that “users don’t have to deal with viruses, malware and security updates” remains to be seen. This is the complete opposite to everything we know when it comes to software and the internet today. If they can pull it off, fantastic, we’ll have to wait and see how they achieve such a bold claim.
Once launched, there’s no doubt Google Chrome OS will be the most popular Linux build to date.
My question is: Do we actually need another OS, consider Windows 7 and Snow Leopard are the lightest, fastest Operating Systems to date ?
More @ Google Blog
Facebook Redesign now available
After months of development, the new look Facebook site is now available. Facebook are progressively updating people’s accounts to switch to the new layout, so if you visit Facebook and you still see the old site, you won’t have to wait long (should be over the next few days).
For those of you who don’t want to wait for Facebook, then you can check out the gallery below of the new, updated look or head to http://new.facebook.com
The update is essentially a restructuring of the existing data, there’s not really any new features or anything to get excited about. They were clearly going for a much more lightweight sight, symptimatic of a site experiencing a massive volume visitors. The down side of this is the site looks to have far to much negative white space, especially if your viewing it on a widescreen monitor, the site actually looks a little empty.

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