next*next*

a yahoo! thinga yahoo! thing

Going with the photophlow

freshelectrons' photoflow roomLast week I discovered photophlow, a web app that some are describing as the reincarnation of Flickr Live. Photophlow launched quietly over the holidays and is still in invite-only beta, built by a startup worth watching called Oortle.

Photophlow lets you share your Flickr photos in real time and interact with photographers and their photos in a dynamic chat room environment that feels at times like a virtual world. The application embraces a collection of powerful APIs from a variety of popular services - Flickr (obviously), Twitter, Tumblr - and connects to the instant messaging client of your choice. Even the venerable Yahoo! Search term extractor manages to contribute to the playful ambiance.

Photophlow wires the social and the semantic together to create delightful, unexpected interactions between pholks and their photos. Encounters take place in the present tense, but are preserved and reflected back into the Flickr photostream of the participants as new metadata -- comments, contacts, collaborations. The phph experience amplifies the power of Flickr as an open platform: this app finds new ways to unlock walled gardens of sociability (you know the profile pages I'm talking about) and cultivates an environment where truly original media-sharing activity can flourish. Talk about hybrid vigor: it's now possible to tweet a photo. Or use a Flickr machine tag such as phlow:emote=doh to express an emotion. Or get an IM notification when something happens in your photophlow room.

flickr live ~ renovatedPhotophlow was created by a handful of people, led by Neil Berkman, a veteran software developer who's been building inventive social apps and thinking about "real-time media sharing" since the days of web 1.0; when social media buzzwords were a rare commodity, an open API was hard to find, and the social graph was barely a twinkle in Dave McClure's eye.

A bit of history (from Eric Costello, who was there making it): The original Flickr evolved from a web-based massively multiplayer game called Game Neverending. (If you're a Flickr user and student of URLs, as I am, you've probably wondered about the .gne file ending you sometimes see on your travels through Flickr. Now you know.). Along the way to becoming the world-class photosharing site it is today, Flickr was a flash app that let you chat about shared photos in real time. Back then, none of this interaction was preserved asynchronously. As Flickr evolved in response to feedback from the lively community it attracted, the Flash app was retired indefinitely, and "Flickr Live" as it was called, lived on only in the dreams and schemes of a few active and inventive early members.

Neil had the good fortune to hook up with one of these passionate ringleaders -- Bryan "striatic" Partington, one of the early flickrati and a longtime advocate for real-time Flickr. Striatic proved to be the perfect co-conspirator -- an antic photo poet in a bowler hat, a skilled UI designer, and natural born storyteller. They collaborated on photophlow for over a year before meeting face to face. This past fall, at the 2007 Web 2.0 Summit, they showed their project to Flickr founder Stewart Butterfield and he gave it his blessing. Photophlow the phenom has just begun.

Paddys Valley comes to Brickhouse

Paddy's Valley Tour '07This past Thursday evening, an ad hoc delegation of Irish high-tech entrepreneurs visited Brickhouse. They heard from Jumpcut entrepreneur and co-founder Mike Folgner, who now leads Yahoo! Video; from Salim Ismail, head of Brickhouse, who spoke about some current projects and the process for selecting new ideas to build; and from Chad Dickerson, who reminisced about his recent visit to Dublin for Mashup Camp and spoke about the hacker-culture renaissance at Yahoo!. The visiting Irish were even treated to an unplanned photo op with Jerry Yang.

The group calls itself Paddy's Valley, and was founded for the purpose of visiting Silicon Valley and getting on the radar of VCs, influencers, and tech leaders at large Internet companies based in the Bay Area. Despite the fact that many of these startups compete for mindshare and funding, they figured that by banding together on a "trade mission" they could create a more likely scenario for being seen and heard. I found this example of purposeful real-world networking almost as intriguing as the business plans and product demos I saw.

Don't get me wrong, these young companies are building cool stuff. The pitches we heard were engaging and well-presented. Plus, members of the Paddy's Valley delegation had the noted charm of the Irish working in their favor. But the distinctly collaborative, emergent approach for gaining the attention of busy business leaders seemed almost as innovative as the product pitches themselves.

It was a great pleasure sharing beer and pizza (what else?) and gabbing on a rainy, wet December evening with the founders of startups creating niche social networks, mobile apps and content services, media-sharing sites, distributed storage services, and task-based verticals with social components for sports, travel, and more.

Check out the startups we learned about, the founders we met. And please let me know if I'm missing any "Padbrothers" or sisters:

Logo from bandon1. Used with permission from Conor O'Neill (bandon1).

Popularity: 12% [?]

About Next*

  • * Tasty bits of hacker goodness
  • * A steady stream of small delights
  • * Ideas, experiments and the people behind them

  • Brought to you by the folks at Yahoo! Brickhouse

  • Editor-at-small: Cynthia Johanson
  • Site design: Matt Fukuda
  • Backend heroics: Kevin Railsback

Next*... where the wildcards are.
Copyright © 2008 Yahoo! All Rights reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy