Radar's Photo Sharing App Comes to the iPhone
ReadWriteWeb —
... its iPhone application (iTunes link), which is one of the better photo sharing and social networking apps we have seen for Apple's phone so far. ...
Radar on iPhone: Sleek Microblogging for Photos
Mashable! —
... has been serving up real-time mobile photo and videos for some time now, but tonight marks the release of their new iPhone app which brings easy uploading and Radar’s fantastic content-centric social features to your phone. ...
Radar gets an iPhone app to better share media amongst friends
VentureBeat —
Let’s be honest, there’s a lot of websites and applications out there right now that let you share things with other people. Twitter does it, FriendFeed does it and Facebook does it, among many others. But while those are increasingly about sharing with as many people as possible, Radar has a sort of “less is more” approach. By sharing things with just people that are actually your friends or acquaintances, the items are more prone to elicit a response. And Radar’s new iPhone application extends that idea.
And Radar actually narrows its focus even more than that. While on a service like Twitter you share ...
Radar iPhone app for real-time photos sharing (Exclusive to iPhoneWorld.ca)
iPhoneWorld.ca iPhone News Headlines —
... Radar are immediately available to friends on any mobile phone on any network; through the desktop site; and through social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter. Features of the Radar application for iPhone include ability to upload iPhone pictures, either from the camera or from the photo library; control who sees each post, sync with Facebook and Twitter to post photos; allows you to stay updated on photo streams of your friends, and more. radar iphone app Radar iPhone app is available for free from the AppStore . Care to rate this iPhone World article? Current news ...
Tiny Pictures’ Radar hits AppStore
IntoMobile - Cell Phone News, Information, and Analysis —
Tiny Pictures’ popular Radar application is now available in the AppStore, allowing iPhone and iPod Touch users to share their photos, videos and conversation among themselves and with the whole world.
For those that are not familiar with Radar, here’s an excerpt from Tiny Pictures’ press release:
Radar helps users share what they’re doing while they’re doing it. iPhone pictures sent to Radar are immediately available to friends on any mobile phone on any network; through the desktop site; and through social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.
Aside from ...
Radar connects with Flickr for photos and comments
VentureBeat —
When starting a conversation, you need a topic. In Radar’s case, that topic is pictures. Users upload them and other users comment on them. The problem is that Radar is still a burgeoning network, and so for new members it may not offer that many conversation starters. Enter Flickr.
Flickr, Yahoo’s hugely popular online photo service, has billions of photos. Thanks to a new integration with Radar, these photos can now be ported over to the Radar service. Equally important, photos can be ported back from Radar to Flickr. And perhaps more importantly, the comments/conversations about these photos are synced back and forth between the ...
Radar.net adds Flickr to mobile repertoire
Webware.com —
... Radar is free in the iTunes App Store. It's also available on Blackberry and Sidekick phones, although only iPhone users get the capability to post photos and pick which of their Flickr contacts they want to appear in the Radar stream. ...
Radar For iPhone Finds Flickr Support
TechCrunch —
Heres an idea: If you’re looking to build up your social site’s user base, add support for a popular, similarly focused (but not directly competitive) social site to your network’s iPhone application. It may sound crazy (who wants to promote someone else’s brand?), but that’s exactly what Radar, a social network for sharing cameraphone images and videos, is doing. This morning, Radar has released an update to their iPhone application which adds Flickr support to the mix.
Though Radar and Flickr are quite similar in that they’re both intended as repositories for your photographs, their finer focus differs ...
Radar.net wants to be your iPhone's photo sharer
The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) —
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Software, Features, Internet Tools, iPhone, App StoreWe're at a new juncture in the course of iPhone development, I believe. Twitter has basically monopolized the "text exporting" function of your iPhone -- if you want to broadcast text from a mobile device, most of us do it through Twitter. But now, we're seeing a whole host of sites and services aiming to be the distributors for your richer media: photos, audio, even video (as well as the iPhone can handle it, anyway). Radar is one such service, and they'd really like to handle any photos you want to send out ...




