Ronald_H
Don't call me Ron
I love it. If earth turned to heaven overnight, there would still be people who would complain.
Amen, brother.
I love it. If earth turned to heaven overnight, there would still be people who would complain.
In this sort of situation, testers need to be listened to in the correct frame of mind. For a lot of folks, change is anathema, and they'll just rebel the whole time.
Then there are folks who are incredibly intolerant of any change that doesn't have 100% of the old functionality right away: the developer is in the position of having to choose between being feature complete before showing anything, or choosing to get feedback on big changes while some functionality is yet to be delivered. These folks are also hard to deal with, when trying to get feedback on what you have delivered (it's always complaints about what you have yet to deliver).
Nothing new here.. I've been involved in beta testing in the past and there will always be those who complain loudly. When a tester does that it can adversely affect opinions so they will sometimes shut down access to the naysayers..
I love it. If earth turned to heaven overnight, there would still be people who would complain.
http://www.ipernity.com
Seriously. Give it a try. I love it more than Flickr. There is much about ipernity that I wish Flickr had all along. Seriously. Check out Ipernity. I think many of you will find it compatible.
I was worried it would not have "community". It does.
I was worried it would not be laid out as nice as Flickr. Its better.
I was worried it would be more ad driven and Facebook/new Flickr like. Its not!
I was worried it would be a lot more expensive for annual membership. Its not.
Groups, contacts, comments, tags, keywords, community, everything's there.
And, perhaps most importantly. I've noticed a LOT of new Flickr people on Ipernity. They seem very happy on Ipernity. Most of the groups that were on Flickr are being created (ported?) to Ipernity. I just feel at home there. A great new alternative that's even more for me than Flickr was.
My 2 cents.
I'm not getting all of the complaints... The ones posted from the beta tester screenshots are, well, out of touch with the realities of running a huge, money hungry online business. Design changes weren't forced on any of us, we aren't and never have been in control of the design. It's as if these users are saying "Host my images cheaply(or free) in the manner I demand!" Want that? Create your own Web site or research what it would take to create an alternative product... Don't like it? Your choice. Membership? Also your choice. Pissed off? Leave Flickr.
Change happens and is only as unsettling as you make it.
I think a lot of those who are complaining just don't like change...
For instance, the only solution I found so far to remove the stupid image banner at the top of my homepage was to create a plain empty gray image with PhotoShop then to upload it in my gallery, then to make it unvisible but for *me* in my gallery, then to choose it as my "cover photo".
I'd be keen to acknowledge that this is the result of a brilliant user-friendly web interface design, but at this point I'd not bet it was... 😀
Don't like it? Your choice. Membership? Also your choice. Pissed off? Leave Flickr.
It just shows what happens when tech savvy people without knowledge of social aspects of business are allowed to make decisions.
On the other hand the average DSLR user with 1Tbyte of unedited snaps may feel more at home now. It just isn't about photography anymore.😀
And they are 100% totally right to think that way. Why would anybody be happy if they were delivered a car with no door handles and only three wheels? 😕 Especially if their trade in had those things. It frankly doesn't matter how much better the new windshield wipers are if more some of the basic stuff is lacking. 🙂