yaKmar wrote:
Are you signed in to google?
Shit came right up for me.
![https://i.imgur.com/76G0J.png](https://i.imgur.com/76G0J.png)
yaKmar wrote:
Are you signed in to google?
Shit came right up for me.
ya pretty much. twitter and fb are more than enough for meghettoperson wrote:
The day all my friends are on it I'll sign up. Since that isn't going to happen I really don't care about it.
Same with Facebook.... Which photographer in their right mind puts things on Fb or Google.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Just a heads-up for all you photographers, if you put pictures on Google+ then Google is allowed to use them royalty-free:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blo … ingtonpost
A lot of them actually. Generally you want to watermark them and upload lower quality though. Save high resolution shots for potential buyers.Zimmer wrote:
Same with Facebook.... Which photographer in their right mind puts things on Fb or Google.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Just a heads-up for all you photographers, if you put pictures on Google+ then Google is allowed to use them royalty-free:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blo … ingtonpost
Thanks. After a bit of messing around I've now got all my email contacts synced up. Added about 10 peopleKmar wrote:
You should be able to edit it in your google contacts.
The official mobile app beats the shit out of facebooks mobile app. But I started using friendcaster pro with facebook anyways.
That would be a critical feature for business use. Otherwise circles would really start to get messy, what with all the various project groups that someone like me would use it for.mtb0minime wrote:
I really really want circles within circles. Please for the love of god. Maybe they're withholding that feature right now.
as a matter of factHurricane2k9 wrote:
Is... is that Myspace Tom?
Here is the article.My Space Tom wrote:
Three days ago, Kevin Rose posted this on Google+: “Decided to forward http://kevinrose.com to my Google+. G+ gives me more (real-time) feedback and engagement than my blog ever did.” His decision set off a little debate on the pros and cons of doing so.
Kevin’s decision was made rapidly, and may well be reversed when it suits his needs. His sense of G+ went from questioning the value of the service in his first post (since deleted), to musing on how Google+ was more like a blog, to completely switching over on Friday. (I prodded him via text message on Thursday: “dude ur totally going to replace ur blog with Google+”)