Mapping project catalogs Instagram sunrises from around the world
Have you noticed the wealth of sunrise and sunset photos on Instagram? Michelle Chandra certainly has, and her project offers a look at the sun’s activity around the world in real time. “All Our Suns” gathers snapshots upload with either the #sunrise or #sunset hashtag, using the posts to populate a set of data-driven maps. Two of the crowdsourced cartography pieces catalog every image that’s uploaded during the course of a 24-hour period — one for sunrises and one for sunsets based on a user’s location. What’s more, you can click on a location marker to view the photo. A third map notes times when two people are posting at the same time, with one updating the beginning and the other observing the end of a day. The whole thing is a study on how our lives literally revolve around the sun and how social networks illustrate time as a never-ending loop.
The maps are part of “All Our Yesterdays:” a larger examination of Instagram’s role in connecting people around the world become and how photographs provide an avenue for that interaction. “Instagram users who chase the sun with their cameras testify to the sun’s ceaseless grip on our lives,” Chandra writes. “Since antiquity we have followed the path of the sun, the moon, and the stars to track the passing of time.”
Filed under: Internet
Via: The Creator’s Project (Vice)
Source: Michelle Chandra
Your photos are more popular when you use filters, according to Yahoo
Whether or not you think photo filters represent creative assets or the death of photography as we know it, one thing’s becoming increasingly clear: they’re your ticket to popularity. Yahoo and Georgia Tech researchers have learned that filtered photos (at least, on Flickr) are 21 percent more likely to get views, and 45 percent more likely to receive comments. This doesn’t mean that you can throw on any effect you like, mind you. Warmer-looking filters usually get the best results, while colder examples have less of an impact. In short, feel free to tweak your Instagram shots if you feel they lack a certain oomph that will draw in the crowds — just don’t try to be overly dark and edgy.
Filed under: Cellphones, Cameras, Internet, Mobile
Via: PetaPixel
Source: Yahoo Labs (Tumblr)
Layout from Instagram is out on Android today for all your collage-making needs
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We’re honestly still surprised when apps from social media companies are released only on iOS before an Android version saunters onto the scene shortly after. Even so, we’re not complaining that Layout from Instagram is out on Android today, two months after its counterpart was launched on iOS. If you haven’t heard about Layout from Instagram, it’s essentially a collage-making app which allows you to take any of your photos and make them into collages using customizable templates.
It’s an interesting choice for an app from Instagram as we would have thought this functionality would be best built into the Instagram app itself, but what do we know. From my brief experience trying out the app today, it’s pretty well made in general (if you’re used to Instagram) though there are a few niggling issues, as always. If you’re the type of person who’s been hanging out for a collage app, Layout from Instagram would not be a bad place to start. If you’re interested, hit the link below to get to the Play Store and download the app for free:
What do you think about Layout from Instagram? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
Source: Phandroid
The post Layout from Instagram is out on Android today for all your collage-making needs appeared first on AndroidSPIN.
Instagram launches Layout app onto Google Play
Instagram has made their Layout collage app available for Android users today, giving you the ability to set up your pictures in several different layouts. It’s something that many other apps have gotten popular doing, but Instagram’s approach seems incredibly streamlined.
The interface is very touch-friendly, allowing you to easily drag and drop different photos, pinch to zoom in, and drag the borders of your different photo frames to adjust the size. That leaves a ton of room for customization, which is great for Instagram users.
As a side note, Instagram has added new tools to their main application for Android users. The tool is called Structure and is designed to help bring out textures and details in your photos.
Come comment on this article: Instagram launches Layout app onto Google Play
Instagram introduces Layout for Android & new creative tool, Structure
Instagram has announced two new features, the Layout app and Structure, a photo editing tool.
As of today, Layout is now available on Android (Note: For the moment, it is not in the Play Store). The app gives users the ability to combine photos into a single image. When you open Layout, it shows previews of custom layouts as you choose photos from your camera roll. The Faces option makes it easy for you to find those with people.
To combine photos, you can drag and drop, pinch to zoom, and/or pull their sides in order to make the desired adjustments. Flipping and rotation are also possible with Layout.
The app’s last feature is Photo Booth. Tapping this starts a countdown and selects photos that will be placed immediately in the layout.
Structure is a tool that brings out details and textures in images. It is available in the latest update for Instagram.
The post Instagram introduces Layout for Android & new creative tool, Structure appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Instagram’s popular Layout collage app now available on Android

Layout, the popular photo collage making application from Instagram, has finally made its way to the Google Play Store after a brief time as an iOS exclusive. A big portion of Instagram users already post photo collages to the social networking platform pretty regularly, so this should be welcomed by many fans of the app.
Layout is pretty simple to use. Once you open the app, you can select up to nine photos to use for each collage from your phone’s gallery. If you don’t see a photo you want to use, you can take a photo from the app using your front-facing camera through the new Photo Booth feature. After your photos have been selected, you can then choose which layout fits your needs by scrolling through a few different options on the top of the screen. After your layout is chosen, you can edit the sizes of individual photos, mirror or flip images, or swap images if you need to.
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In addition to the new Layout app, Instagram itself is getting a new feature in an update rolling out today. The feature is called Structure, a new creative tool that helps to enhance details and textures. If you’d like to check for your Instagram update, head on over to this link.
If you’re a fan of Instagram, odds are Layout will be a nice addition to your long list of installed applications. Head to the Play Store link below to download Layout for free.
Instagram’s Layout collage app comes to Android
You no longer have to use an iPhone to get creative with Layout, Instagram’s collage app — it’s now available for Android. As before, the software lets you cram up to nine photos into a single image, with options to shuffle and flip pictures if you’re aiming for a particular effect. It’ll automatically detect faces to help you find your friends, and you don’t need an Instagram account to sign up or share pictures. You will get an extra perk if you do use Facebook’s square photo app, though. Android-based Instagram users (iOS is coming soon) are getting Structure, an editing tool that emphasizes details and textures in your shots. However artistic you are, you’ll definitely want to swing by Google Play.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile, Facebook
Source: Google Play
Browsing Twitter and Instagram in VR? Yup, it’s a thing
I know, you bought yourself a VR rig and never want to take it off. It’s the future, that’s natural! And with something like the Gear VR’s passthrough camera you don’t even need to remove the headset to do menial “real-world” chores like going to the bathroom, grabbing another Mountain Dew out of the fridge or some Doritos out of the cupboard. But what if you wanted to check your Twitter feed or see how many new likes that Instagram photo of hitting your activity goal on your Apple Watch got while avoiding meatspace? Have no fear folks, because with a new app called Swerve you’ll be able to do that without removing your Android VR system. The app puts Twitter into a 3D space and as VR Focus notes, you can peruse searches, mentions and hashtags too — apparently all in a cloud-filled skybox. Perfect.
The free app only handles the microblogging service for now, but Facebook’s photo network is coming “soon.” Hopefully that’s ready for Swerve’s launch sometime later this month (you can sign up for early access right now) and just in time for peak crossfit photo season. It only supports the likes of Google Cardboard for now, but hopefully Gear VR support’s being considered as well. You know, so we’ll never have to let actual reality get in the way of our virtual experiences again.
Filed under: Cellphones, Peripherals, Wearables, Software, Mobile
Via: VR Focus
Source: Swerve VR
What Instagram did for brunch, MassRoots hopes to do for weed

Cannabis or “weed” is, in practical terms, going mainstream. It’s no longer exclusively sold from basements and back alleys; in 23 states and Washington D.C., it’s sold from licensed and bonded shops. The cannabis movement has done a lot of growing up over the past couple of years as its public acceptance has skyrocketed across the US. Cannabis itself has gone from a black market “gateway” drug that funded the atrocities of Mexican cartels to a potential super-medicine drawing the attention of Wall Street’s most powerful investors and all seemingly overnight.
But is cannabis culture really ready for this sea change of support? Can users get over their self-perpetuating stereotypes and celebrate this pastime as coffee and cocktail enthusiasts do — by spamming their Instagram followers with inane pictures of what they’re about to consume? If the MassRoots photo-sharing app, billed as the “Instagram for weed,” is any indication, probably not.
I should first point out that I grew up in San Francisco. I smoked cannabis regularly for years before taking a drag of my first cigarette or even a sip of beer. Cannabis use wasn’t just normalized when I was a teenager; it was blasé. Everybody from my bus drivers to my public school teachers — heck, even my old scoutmaster — got lit on the regular and with surprisingly little pomp or circumstance. As such, much of the “cannabis pop culture” that many people relish has always come across as comical and amateurish to me. I mean, who actually wants to be that stereotypical, “Whoa look at my hands, THEY’RE HUGE!” kind of stoner? Who wants to be that one asshole who reeks of patchouli oil and can’t stop talking about how hash rips cured his gout?

As cannabis transitions from the counterculture to the mainstream, people are beginning to treat it like our other two favorite low-level intoxicants: coffee and beer. This includes not only obsessing over the origins, production methods, flavor and preparation of the product itself, but also over the ever-more intricate apparatus needed to consume them. Just as freeze-dried Folgers in a percolator coffee maker has been supplanted by Keurig K-cups, apples and proto-pipes have been replaced by dab sticks and vapor pens. And just as craft beer makers obsess over the quality over every hop, so too do stoners over the appearance and potency of their favorite strains.
As cannabis transitions from the counterculture to the mainstream, people are beginning to treat it like coffee and beer.
And just as people obsessively snap pictures of what they’re eating and drinking to post to Instagram, so too do many stoners with what they’re smoking. But that’s where the trouble starts. While getting shitfaced at 10 AM on a Sunday (aka “brunch”) is a perfectly acceptable use of Instagram, the site’s Community Guidelines specifically prohibit users from posting pictures of cannabis and other intoxicants. It specifically states, “Promoting recreational drug use is also not allowed.” There’s also the issue of police trawling through the app looking for people to arrest and the fact that cannabis is (for the time being) still a federally prohibited Schedule I drug.
And that’s where the MassRoots app comes in. The so-called Instagram of weed reportedly offers its users the ability to share their cannabis-related photos freely, safely and without any fear of violating their terms of service or running afoul of state medical marijuana laws. This is supposedly because the app is only made available to users in states that allow medical marijuana. During the initial setup, however, the only “verification” the iOS and Android app performed was to have me pick a state out of a list of 23 where medical cannabis is legal. I wasn’t required to disclose my patient ID number nor upload a scan of my doctor’s recommendation — nothing. It’d be no harder for a person from a non-MMJ state to game the app’s security than it would be for a 12-year-old to figure out how to subtract 18 from the current calendar year to get into a porn site. What’s more, even picking an MMJ state from this app’s list still isn’t going to protect you from either the DEA or overzealous local law enforcement.

Security concerns aside, the app itself functions uncannily like Instagram. Users can upload and share photos, like and comment on the pictures of others and follow other users’ streams. It’s really just like Instagram except the pictures are of glassware (e.g., hash pipes and bongs), nuggets of cannabis and flowering grow houses instead of fancy cocktails, tapas and your cat. Rap group Cypress Hill’s B Real is a member of the site and users like Valleyrec420, NativeRoots and MassGlass all offer professional-looking photo streams as well. Surprisingly, marquee cannabis groups like Stoned Society, High Times and NORML were nowhere to be found.
It’s just like Instagram except the pictures are of glassware, nuggets of cannabis and flowering grow houses instead of fancy cocktails, tapas and your cat.
I was also amazed by the lack of dispensaries using the app. It seems the perfect platform to connect with potential customers and yet I couldn’t find a single shop in San Francisco that used MassRoots. There are also no fewer than 48 people impersonating Snoop Dogg on the site so good luck trying to follow him. In short, with a significant portion of the content on this app being recycled from other sources — be it Tumblr or Reddit’s r/trees — it’s really difficult to know who’s worth following.
Unfortunately, the majority of MassRoots’ users are not gifted photographers (being stoned clearly doesn’t help matters either) so images are not typically of the best quality… or even in focus all that often. That’s not to say you can’t find great accounts; you’re just going to need to wade through a significant number of people snapping overexposed shots of pipes, Bic lighters and their hazy college dorm rooms to find the good stuff.

MassRoots, despite clearly being modeled after Instagram, does lack some of the more popular apps functionality. Direct messages, for example, are nonexistent. But for what MassRoots lacks in a large user base, it makes up for in user interaction. I posted a single picture to MassRoots and have already garnered more followers than I have on Instagram. Plus, looking through the feeds you see that virtually every single comment on posts is positive and supportive.
Overall, trawling through MassRoots is a lot like walking through a Cannabis Cup: equal parts enthusiasm and self-parody. It’s great to see people publicly embracing an American pastime that, 20 years ago, would have landed you in federal prison. But, seriously, how many goddamn times do I need to read the phrase, “Looooool I’m high AF” in a three-minute period? How many macro shots of generic nugs and sheets of wax do I have to see before they all blend into an eye-glazing morass? Turns out, about 45 of them.
Maybe my disappointment with MassRoots isn’t with the site itself or its largely millennial user base. Maybe the problem is me. It might be because I’ve been so inundated with the idea that cannabis is equivalent to alcohol that photos of people wearing hemp cowboy hats and fan-leaf leis makes me cringe. Or maybe it’s just as Lethal Weapon’s Roger Murtaugh once said: “I’m getting too old for this shit.”
[Image credits: Blaine Harrington III / Alamy (top image); MassRoots (screenshots)]
Filed under: Internet
Facebook is using your Instagram feed to suggest new friends
Notice some familiar faces popping up in Facebook’s “People You May Know” section? Well, there’s a reason for that. Zuckerberg & Co. recently began serving up suggestions for prospective connections based on your Instagram feed. It’s no surprise that Facebook would pull data from the filter-driven app, especially from folks who’ve linked the two — it does own the photo software after all. And as we’ve heard a few times before, Facebook likes its apps to share info. Of course, if you’re like me, you use the two social networks for entirely different reasons (food pics and keeping up with old pals, natch). Facebook confirmed that it “recently” began pulling data from Instagram based on who you follow, but wasn’t too keen on elaborating further.
Filed under: Internet, Software, Facebook
Source: The Daily Dot

















