Quantcast
PCWorld.com is upgrading some back-end systems. Some site features, such as user registration, may be temporarily unavailable.

Share Photos Easily With Anyone, Anywhere

Powerful photo networking services let you share shots to anyone, from anywhere, even while you're still on vacation.

Rick Broida, PC World

  • 0 Yes
  • 0 No

Automate Your Photo Sharing

Flickr, Phanfare, and PicasaWeb all require users to upload their photos to them. That seemingly minor task is one of the chief impediments that discourage busy people from putting their pictures online. Memeo Share takes a slightly different tack, supplementing Web albums with automated sharing between PCs.

Memeo Share: click for full-size imageAfter installing Memeo's software on your PC or Mac, you designate one or more folders as "shares." The app then automatically uploads all photos that you store in or ad to those folders to your online account (and optionally resizes them for faster uploading), and it syncs to the PCs of friends and family members (your Sharing Circle, in Memeo parlance) who are also running the Memeo software.

If you're on the receiving end of new photos, you still have to import them manually into your preferred photo-management program. Also, you're at the mercy of your friends' judgment to some extent, since you get every single photo your circle elects to share, not just the ones you want. For the moment, Memeo offers no way of ordering prints or gifts either (though that option is in the works, according to company reps). So despite offering an expedient method for swapping photos with your personal network, Memeo Share isn't ideal.

Like Phanfare and Flickr, Memeo offers a 1GB account free of charge. Uunlimited storage costs $5 per month. The biggest downside may be that the service requires everyone in your circle to download and install yet another program. (An informal survey of my own circle revealed that many users can't tolerate another System Tray resident.) Phanfare, for its part, employs an excellent Explorer-like tool that's conveniently browser-based. (An optional desktop client is available for both Windows and Mac.)

Sharing on the Run

It's one thing to share photos when you're sitting in front of your PC, but what about when you're at a wedding? Or on a beach in Bermuda? Or backstage at a Decemberists concert? Wouldn't it be great if you could send those photos out to your peeps in something closer to real time?

Phanfare for iPhone: click for full-size imageIf you're shooting with a cell phone that supports e-mail, you can. But instead of sending shots to a handful of contacts, why not ferry them straight to your network? Phanfare, for instance, will automatically add to your albums any photos sent to a special e-mail address--just head to the Settings page to enable e-mail uploads, choose a password, and designate who gets to see e-mailed images: friends, family, and/or the public at large. Phanfare also has a free iPhone app that automatically uploads iPhone snaps to your account.

Windows Mobile users can publish photos directly to their Windows Live Spaces pages by installing the Windows Live for Windows Mobile app. Just open any photo, press Menu, and click Send to Your Space.

Windows Live for Windows Mobile: click for full-size imagePractically any phone can whip together a photo blog on the fly: Just e-mail or MMS your photos to go@blogger.com. In return you'll get the Web address of your newly created blog, along with a "claim token" to enter at Blogger.com when you get back to your PC. If you already have a Blogger account, you can link your phone to it for future photo posting.

Eye-Fi Explore: click for full-size imageOf course, cell phones take notoriously bad pictures. Ideally, you would be able to share photos straight from your camera, even when you're out and about. The $130 Eye-Fi Explore--a 2GB SD memory card with built-in Wi-Fi--makes that possible. Just find the nearest Wayport hotspot (there are about 10,000 of them in the United States), and the Eye-Fi will automatically upload your photos to an online photo service. It currently supports more than 20 such services, including Facebook, Phanfare, and Shutterfly. In addition, the card geotags each photo so that friends and family will know where it was taken. The Eye-Fi is compatible with all cameras that use SD media.

Pushing Pictures

Let's face it: Not everyone has a computer (or has the tech savvy to install photo-sharing software or to navigate photo-sharing Web sites). In fact, some of the people we most want to share pictures with are not inclined to use high-tech photo-sharing tools at all. As a result, sharing your digital memories with remote grandparents or luddite cousins can be a chore.

HP A10 Printing Mailbox: click for full-size imageFortunately, even the digitally disengaged can receive shared photos thanks to HP's A10 Printing Mailbox. This highly automated gizmo downloads photos (and e-mail) via a regular phone line and prints them on the spot, enabling you to push pictures to grandma even if she doesn't own a PC.

The $150 A10 pairs with a service called Presto ($150 per year or $15 monthly), which turns your photos and e-mail messages (along with those sent by friends and relatives) into nicely formatted, themed documents and then delivers them to the printer.

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No

"Share Photos Easily With Anyone, Anywhere" Comments

Dell's December Days of Deals

Learn more about the Windows Phone PCWorld Gift Guide

Focus on Personal Productivitysponsored by Microsoft

  • Personal Finance 2.0 These free and fee-based Web services not only aggregate data from your online bank accounts, they give you tools for managing your money.
  • High-Tech Travel Tips Plenty of stories provide advice for elite mobile professionals. But what about you, the unproductive traveler?

People who read this also read:

  • 15 Minutes to a Secure Business Get the Secure in 15 toolkit starting with the "15 Minutes Month-at-a-Glance" calendar. McAfee will send you additional tools and tricks to stay protected around the clock.
  • A Buyer's Guide to Data Protection Implementing data protection products and processes can be daunting. Make the right decisions by exploring what is available and what makes sense for your organization. Use this simple guide to evaluate different vendor offerings.

Sponsored Links