@jackdweck It'll be my go-to camera when iOS lets other camera apps be on the lock screen. Which I assume is why iOS doesn't let other camera apps be on the lock screen :-\
@staringispolite but then you can't share them with your Snapchat friendz!
The inability to import photos/videos into Snapchat stories is part of its genius. cc @jackdweck
@rrhoover@jackdweck True but (1) I can't share with friends if I miss capturing the memory entirely. Right now, I have to unlock my phone, maybe close another app, wait for Snapchat to finish loading, and hope the moment hasn't passed. I've missed moments because of this as recently as our trip to MoMa this weekend
(2) I can still add photos to 1-1 snap chat chats
(3) I have exactly zero friends on snapchat that I don't also have elsewhere
Again, Snapchat is building upon existing user behavior and adding more utility to the platform. In many ways it's starting to look like most mobile messengers like Facebook Messenger or LINE, and that's a good thing, imo.
Funny, @jgcatalanoSnapMemories ~5 months ago as a way to relive past Snapchat stories.
@rrhoover@jgcatalano Ok true, and yes it will be more addictive, but the whole idea of ephemerality was the reason people jumped on the platform. Skipping that core value, can also open the door for new platforms.
@rrhoover After taking a second look, here are my thoughts:
• It looks like you have to manually save to memories, rather than all snaps being saved by default — so I'm not as reluctant.
• It's basically a photo vault within the app. Let's hope it's secure since snaps are likely more sensitive than those in your camera roll.
• I'm not so sure about adding old snaps to stories; it departs from Snapchat's original mantra of living in the moment.
• Like others have said, this could push Snapchat even closer to becoming your primary camera/photo app; only time will tell.
I really hope they improve the quality of videos and photos when saved this way...if you download your own story currently the image quality is reduced significantly.
@imscott +1. Snapchat's current tech for taking photos is just capturing whatever frame is on-screen during the preview. It's effectively the same thing as screenshotting a freezeframe from a paused video iirc. Not good. Snapchat will need to improve the quality of saved photos/videos for the potential of Memories to be fully realized imo
@grahamperich@imscott This explains the poor photo quality. But even videos that you download from your story are significantly reduced in quality. You don't seem to get access to the original video file from your story, it appears to re-encode the video all over again and at a very low bitrate.
@jgcatalano In a sense, that content is their only value. In fact, you can reduce most companies to robust databases with unique content. Google = URLs. Insta = pictures. Indeed = Job postings.
Snapchat keeps getting better and better! It's incredible how powerful this app is and can be, "Memories" is a proof of how Snap has so much to grow ☺.
Huge split between people who love this new feature and those who worry it is the opposite of what Snapchat was when it started. Quite interesting to see other reactions of current users over the addition of the feature.
@immatthamlin It's risky, Snapchat content is usually raw and so it's easy to share because users are not expected to keep level with pre-produced content. Now that publishers will be able to enhance their pictures and videos, the average joe could feel more embarrassed to share. I could be entirely wrong when the ease of sharing on Snapchat could be very well attributed to the fact that there's no score, such as likes, to compare oneself to others.
I totally agree, one of the reasons that I share more on Snap (compared to instagram/twitter/facebook) is because its 95-99% spur of the moment photos or videos which feel 10x easier to share with a close group of friends.
Great addition. The core ephemerality is still there. Now users won't have to download their snaps/stories, they can now save them in-app (keeping the entire experience within snapchat).
I want to know more about My Eyes Only, does it remove it from your memories completely or does it add it to a password protected folder or something? 🤔
@marsh931 It bizarrely appears to upload the photo to Snapchat when you add it to "My Eyes Only" in addition to removing it from the camera roll tab. Very very strange because the camera roll is not uploaded to Snapchat by default. So only your potentially most private photos will be uploaded to Snapchat's servers?
I mean, it's not really giving up "ephermality" that much, because they already let you download the photos as soon as you took them. This is just giving you a way to do that without leaving the Snapchat experience, which is obviously good for them.
The direction they're moving in a utility is genius, Big props to the @Snapchat dev team for innovating in the right ways. Most millenials use snapchat as their go to camera anyway, so for them to incorperate this feature is a no brainer.
Why is there no mention anywhere of the automatic tagging applied to memories? Snapchat are blatantly running A.I through your photos and I'm quite shocked at what it can tag...cats...dogs...specific breed of dog, carpet on my floors, phones...it's literally picking up every object in your photos and tagging them. Does any other camera or album app do this? Search your memories and see. If it's being done to memories, it's being done to every photo you take on Snapchat. There would have been no way for users to realise they were doing this until now. Massive invasion of privacy.
The "save for my eyes only" feature harkens back to the early utility of the service, where snaps were deliberately a private artifact. Overall, the direction definitely challenges the native iOS memories feature, which will roll out with iOS 10 this fall.
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