Archive for October 15th, 2009

Apple’s iPhoto Makes It Way Too Easy To Delete Your Entire Flickr Library

October 15th, 2009

Apple has long been asso­ci­ated with the say­ing “it just works”. Well, some­times it appar­ently works a lit­tle too well, to the point of allow­ing users to delete their entire Flickr libraries in one fell swoop with­out really mean­ing to. Oops.

The prob­lem stems from the way Apple’s pop­u­lar iPhoto soft­ware is inte­grated with Flickr. Recent ver­sions of iPhoto allow users to sync spec­i­fied albums with Flickr, which means they can auto­mat­i­cally upload new pho­tos as soon as they import them into iPhoto from their cam­eras, and change their cap­tions for both at once. The prob­lem is that iPhoto treats this sync­ing very lit­er­ally: if you delete a photo from from of these synced albums on iPhoto, it doesn’t just remove it from the Set on Flickr  — it actu­ally deletes the photo from your Flickr account entirely.

iPhoto appar­ently informs users that when they stop shar­ing a photo album between iPhoto and Flickr, “The album no longer appears on Flickr, but the pho­tos remain in your [iPhoto] library.” The word­ing is both ambigu­ous (Apple could just mean it’s delet­ing the pho­tos from the Flickr set) and not nearly strong enough to sug­gest that it’s actu­ally delet­ing data. And plenty of peo­ple have made that mistake.

Over the last sev­eral weeks this has led to a num­ber of threads in Flickr’s help forum where some users are up in arms after acci­den­tally delet­ing hun­dreds of pho­tos at once.

Full story at: http://www.techcrunch.com/

About That Chrome OS Event

October 15th, 2009

We’ve been report­ing a lot about Chrome OS the past few days. Pos­si­ble fea­tures, screen­shots, early builds — lots of good stuff. And tomor­row was promis­ing to bring even more as yes, there’s an event par­tially deal­ing with Chrome OS sched­uled to take place on Google’s Moun­tain View cam­pus. But sadly, we’ve been banned from the event.

Truth be told, all press is now banned from the event, we were told this evening. And that sucks because just yes­ter­day we were con­firmed as atten­dees and had planned to report on what we saw and heard. But then PC World and The Next Web spilled the beans on the event, and Google decided to ban the press.

How­ever, before they banned us and closed down reg­is­tra­tions, we did man­age to get the con­fir­ma­tion email about the event.

Full Story at: http://www.techcrunch.com/