500 photo limit also applies to albums
Any download will be at most 500 images.
500 photo limit also applies to albums
Any download will be at most 500 images.
The files will have the same EXIF data they had when originally updated. Any details added to your photos after upload will be compiled in a separate JSON file.
The downloads will include original exif data. If that has been altered (e.g. location or time (NB I adjusted some for diff timezones)) the alterations will be provided as JSON
Keep in mind that links to the requested data are time sensitive and will expire
Any flickr download link is available in account settings, but for a limited time.
Flickr downloads of my images can be done: - by selecting 500 images at a time in Camera roll. This would be I think the best approach for timeline approaches. You get a downloadable zip. - by downloading an album. as zip - by downloading all my data, as zip. The text implies it will be in chunks of 500 images too, so perhaps also chronological? (in my case 87 zip files or so)
Folksonomy by [[Thomas Vander Wal]] on 2007-02-02
https://www.flickr.com/photos/aki_oda/albums/72157606070587225/
Another writer in Japan using the Pile of Index Cards method with visualizations in Flickr.
Getting Things Done with Index Cards<br /> by Jazz DiMauro
referenced in Lifehacker article as early as 2005
Note the use of envelopes for separation. Did this predate the Noguchi Filing System, inspired by it or wholly separate?
https://www.flickr.com/photos/36761543@N02/
Kf333 falls into the tradition of PoIC which they associated directly.
They photographed and saved their cards into Flickr.




https://blog.flickr.net/en/2022/03/17/flickr-forever-2022/
Flickr is creating space for restricted and moderate content. Free users can only have 50 non-public photos.
Clicking through to the photo, there is no mention of this image appearing on this important announcement. Perhaps the author privately contact the photographer about using his image. Since Ken Doctor is so incredible with his media experience (i’m being serious), I’m fairly certain someone from his team would have contacted the photographer to give him a heads up.
I'm sure I've said it before, but I maintain that if the source of the article and the target both supported the Webmention spec, then when a piece used an image (or really any other type of media, including text) with a link, then the original source (any website, or Flickr in this case) would get a notification and could show—if they chose—the use of that media so that others in the future could see how popular (or not) these types of media are.
Has anyone in the IndieWeb community got examples of this type of attribution showing on media on their own websites? Perhaps Jeremy Keith or Kevin Marks who are photographers and long time Flickr users?
Incidentally I've also mentioned using this notification method in the past as a means of decentralizing the journal publishing industry as part of a peer-review, citation, and preprint server set up. It also could be used as part of a citation workflow in the sense of Maria Popova and Tina Roth Eisenberg's Curator's Code<sup>[1]</sup>set up, which could also benefit greatly now with Webmention support.
HyperLinks
Not liking Hyperlinks with the "L" capitalized.
LAST YEAR Flickr, a photo-sharing site, announced it would cut its free storage from 1 terabyte (more than 200,000 images) to just to 1,000 items. Starting this month, many users may find that their content is in danger of being deleted.
Note that Flickr's new owner, SmugMug, promised to continue to host all CC-licensed images shared before 1 Nov 2018 for free.
Flickr Commons photos will not be deleted. Anything uploaded with a CC license before November 1, 2018, won’t be deleted, but users will need to upgrade to Pro to upload more than 1,000 photos or videos.
Flickr's new owner SmugMug promises to continue to host all CC-licensed images shared before 1 Nov 2018.
"UCD Library Cultural Heritage: Launch of the Dublin Metropolitan Police Prisoners Books." Flickr (2015-05-11)
Flickr album of photographs from the SPITU-sponsored launch of the digital DMP Prisoners Books at Liberty Hall, Dublin.