- The default display size of photos has been increased 30 percent, from 500 pixels wide to 640. Newer computers with larger, more high-resolution displays are put to better use, rather than filling the screen with whitespace.
- The entire photo page has been made wider and taller.
- A light box few darkens the white pixels to black, much like Photoshop, so you can look at photos without being bombarded with white light.
- Photo titles are closer to the description, so you can easily figure out what a photo is about.
- The photo’s owner, date taken, camera, and geographic location are clustered at the right of the page.
- There’s a map that shows the geolocation data attached to the photo. You can pop up the map over the page for a larger view.
The photostream to which a photo belongs appears as an interactive filmstrip. You can scroll it within the page.- You can pop up a map that shows the geolocation data in the photo.
- You, and anyone else, can “star” an image to mark it as a favorite.
- Other users can add to a Facebook-like stream of comments and stars below the image.
- Navigation has been cleaned up. For example, you can now use arrow keys to go back and forth through a filmstrip.
The new Flickr is more of a major overhaul than it seems. Sign up for the opt-in beta test program, use it for two days, then try going back.
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