mani
Well-known
Yahoo is such a mess. A headless giant that lurches from one clumsy disaster to the next. While I generally like the visual aspects of the Flickr re-design the last couple years, it felt like too little too late: a one-off burst of interest from the monolithic and indifferent owner. And never really technically resolved: any sort of search will still fire up the fans on even the latest laptop because of the poorly implemented javascript.
I've had a Flickr pro account that idly renews for the past few years. Each time this happens, I think that maybe I should actually start using the service again. But somehow Yahoo's ugly claws always puts me off: for a while it was the stupendously ugly purple navigation bar they placed at the top of every page, at other times it was the frustration and extreme irritation of simply logging-in through my hated (and totally unused) Yahoo ID.
Each and every single time I would attempt to log-in, I'd have to jump through multiple hoops, get referred and redirected through one online form after another - each accompanied by intrusive, full-page Yahoo advertisements - before finally landing on the Yahoo News page: a place I never, ever want to see under any circumstances.
The full-page advertisements that accompany this torture are symptomatic of Yahoo's tone-deafness: why on earth would anyone being put through the horror of their convoluted, Kafkaesque failed log-in process want to suddenly start clicking on a Yahoo ad? But that's a digression.
In any case, this time I thought I should finally take control of the Flickr account. Make sure everything is in order before Yahoo goes under. Naturally, this is easier said than done.
Apparently Flickr had some sort of undefined server 'crash' on March 31 affecting membership details, so now the forum has an 'official' thread to help users with problems logging-in. Ironically, to post on that thread you have to be logged-in - but that's also a digression.
If anyone wants to experience the true nightmare of how a faceless (and utterly soulless) bureacracy runs a company, then try dealing with Yahoo. The failed log-in process is perfectly circular - the end refers you back to the beginning, with no way out.
Somewhere buried on a Yahoo page you can find a tiny, obscure button saying 'CONTACT US', but this is a lie: the button leads to a so-called 'help' page, that steps you painfully and slowly through the steps you've already taken - and then back to the beginning of the circle again. And no contact was ever a possibility. Not even one that promises to 'get back to you' but never does.
It would be nice to think that Yahoo might sell Flickr to someone who cares. But they won't. No-one actually does care what happens to it anymore, so I imagine it will go down with its monstrous parent. It's a pity - I still enjoy browsing other people's images.
I've had a Flickr pro account that idly renews for the past few years. Each time this happens, I think that maybe I should actually start using the service again. But somehow Yahoo's ugly claws always puts me off: for a while it was the stupendously ugly purple navigation bar they placed at the top of every page, at other times it was the frustration and extreme irritation of simply logging-in through my hated (and totally unused) Yahoo ID.
Each and every single time I would attempt to log-in, I'd have to jump through multiple hoops, get referred and redirected through one online form after another - each accompanied by intrusive, full-page Yahoo advertisements - before finally landing on the Yahoo News page: a place I never, ever want to see under any circumstances.
The full-page advertisements that accompany this torture are symptomatic of Yahoo's tone-deafness: why on earth would anyone being put through the horror of their convoluted, Kafkaesque failed log-in process want to suddenly start clicking on a Yahoo ad? But that's a digression.
In any case, this time I thought I should finally take control of the Flickr account. Make sure everything is in order before Yahoo goes under. Naturally, this is easier said than done.
Apparently Flickr had some sort of undefined server 'crash' on March 31 affecting membership details, so now the forum has an 'official' thread to help users with problems logging-in. Ironically, to post on that thread you have to be logged-in - but that's also a digression.
If anyone wants to experience the true nightmare of how a faceless (and utterly soulless) bureacracy runs a company, then try dealing with Yahoo. The failed log-in process is perfectly circular - the end refers you back to the beginning, with no way out.
Somewhere buried on a Yahoo page you can find a tiny, obscure button saying 'CONTACT US', but this is a lie: the button leads to a so-called 'help' page, that steps you painfully and slowly through the steps you've already taken - and then back to the beginning of the circle again. And no contact was ever a possibility. Not even one that promises to 'get back to you' but never does.
It would be nice to think that Yahoo might sell Flickr to someone who cares. But they won't. No-one actually does care what happens to it anymore, so I imagine it will go down with its monstrous parent. It's a pity - I still enjoy browsing other people's images.