Straight outta the blocks late last week there was Vinepeek, a website which throws up just-posted Vine videos. Now there’s Vine Roulette, which offers up an entire wall of six-second videos for you to… uh… enjoy? More »
Right this very moment you’re probably seeing a few Vine videos popping up on your Twitter feed wondering what on earth these tiny videos are taking hold when previous (rather similar) apps and services have done it so many different ways before. There are several reasons why this service is catching the public’s taps at a furious rate, the first of them being the fact that Twitter acquired the company and decided to tell their entire userbase to go ahead and make Vine videos as much as possible, right away! The second is the iTunes App Store choosing Vine as an Editor’s Choice download just yesterday.
Vine is an app that allows you to record videos from your smartphone or tablet device (though it’s optimized for smartphones) in segments or all at once. You can hold your finger down on the screen (also a viewfinder) to record one long 6 second video, or you can hold it down in bursts, recording as many short moments as you like inside 6 seconds total. These videos are processed extremely rapidly and are able to be uploaded to the internet (hosted by Vine) quickly as well.
Once you’ve created a video in Vine, you have the option to do several things with it, the first being absolutely nothing at all:
1. Save only to your device, a 6 second video existing on your smart device on its own.
2. Upload to Vine only.
3. Upload to Vine and share on Twitter.
4. Upload to Vine and share on Facebook.
5. Upload to Vine and share on Twitter and Facebook at the same time.
At the moment unless you exit the Vine app and upload the resulting video through some other non-Vine service, you’ll need to upload to Vine in order to see your video shared anywhere else. Also at the moment the two services you’re able to share with (besides the app-centric Vine itself) are Facebook and Twitter. Vine is very similar to the app Instagram in that you’re able to create media and share it only with your other friends in-app, but unlike that environment, Vine makes no effort to hide the fact that everything you upload to the web is, indeed, entirely public.
If you upload anything you record with Vine to the internet, it will be public. That’s the long and short of it. According to Vine’s Privacy Policy, anything you choose to share with Vine is considered information (and media) that you choose to be made public. This includes data of all kinds, video, location information, the profile you create, and everything in-between.
If you like Vine but you’d rather create your miniature moving images in gif form (that’s less like a video and more like a moving photo file), you may want to check out Cinemagram. They’ve been open for business for many months at this point and have just (this week) revealed a new way to create media called “Shorts” which combine several of their own “cine” clips to create a mini movie – that’s not a coincidental release at all – no way!
You’ll be able to download Vine from the iTunes App Store right this minute for free, if you feel the urge to jump in on this mini movie party – it’s optimized for iPhone and iPod touch, but you can use it on your iPad too if you don’t mind the tiny layout. This app will almost certainly be coming to Android very soon, and we wouldn’t be surprised if Windows Phone 8 got a taste of the joy before Summer rolls around.
SlashGear 101: What is Vine, and what does it do? is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Some people are out there using Vine for pretty dumb things. Others are capturing more interesting six-second snippets their actually interesting lives, or making stop-motion videos. And you can creep on all of them, one after the other, in a constant fire-hose of anonymous, random video with Vinepeek. More »
Facebook obviously isn’t interested in welcoming new social media players, and not long after stopping Yandex’s Wonder app from combing its precious data, it’s decided to block the friend-finding feature in Twitter’s Vine video embed app. Using the “find people” option in Vine now presents users with an error message, essentially killing that labor-saving option. Facebook, as we all know, is notorious for keeping rivals’ noses out of its database, and let’s not forget it pulled Instagram Card support from Twitter last year. We’ve contacted the social network for comment, and will update you if we get a response.
Filed under: Internet, Software, Facebook
Source: The Telegraph
For all the reasons that Facebook is a massive success, it has one card that trumps the likes of Twitter, Google and LinkedIn: it knows who your real-life friends are. Kindly, Facebook shares that data with third parties apps using its Social Graph API—but it seems that privilege might not be a given for much longer. More »
Vine Is Already Broken
Posted in: Today's Chili So Vine is out, and its “Instagram for Video” schtick is novel, but it’s going to take a while for people to get the hang of it. We know that because instead of showing us the world, animated, so far everyone is just showing us… what’s on their desks. More »
Twitter just got more GIF-friendly, by introducing Vine, a new video-sharing service for clips that are six seconds or less. More »
Why it seems like only yesterday we were telling you about Twitter’s new video tweeting feature, courtesy of a tweet from CEO Dick Costolo. With the bird out of the bag, Vine’s just made its way to iOS, so those with an iPhone or iPod touch looking for the video equivalent to 140 characters can pick it up for free now, courtesy of the App Store. Or, if you just want to bask in the adorableness of others, check out Twitter’s short video-filled blog post below.
Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Software, Mobile, Apple
In October of last year, Twitter picked up a little video clip company called “Vine” before it even got the chance to launch. Now it’s finally being folded into Twitter, and CEO Dick Costolo is showing it off. More »