4/30/2023 0 Comments Flickr uploadr 64 bit![]() So we don’t really know how images get into Explore. Anecdotally, based on my observations, I agree that faving (“liking”) is actually more important than views or comments in terms of the algorithm’s ranking. Early movement is vital: you don’t get an image “Explored” unless it starts garnering views, comments, and faves pretty early in its online history. The only thing that is clear is that something like the community trail conundrum is at work: the more times a trail is trod upon the more visible it becomes, leading to more visits, more visibility, and a bigger trail, all in a virtuous spiral. Really, the process of “being Explored” is pretty much a black box. Of course, blaming an opaque algorithm for a secret sauce is not unusual in “high tech land,” whether that secret sauce is Google’s PageRank algorithm or Flickr’s interestingness algorithm for Explore. ![]() This score is often referred to as the “interestingness” factor of an image.” Faves are heavily weighted in the equation and are far more important than comments. The better the score the higher an image gets placed in the Explore list. This math equation (called an algorithm) calculates a score based on how many views, faves and comments an images gets over a period of time. As one FAQ for an Explore derivative group on Flickr puts it, “Selections for Explore are made by a math equation. SmugMug has made it clear that being “Explored” is reserved for paying customers a/k/a Professional members of Flickr, which seems quite fair, and a good policy.īesides membership category, Flickr itself is pretty mum about the process of being “Explored”, but points to an algorithm for something they dub “interestingness”. In April, 2018 SmugMug bought Flickr from Verizon, who had acquired it about a year earlier from Yahoo. So some of the images included in Flickr Explore are pretty compelling (I like to think mine are!), and others not so much. I get an image “Explored” once every quarter or so besides Crepuscular Coast, two of the most recent ones are Lonely Road / Poem of the Road and Twisted. My own experience is that any image that “makes Explore” get 10K page views almost immediately, and is typically profitably licensed. But even compared with Instagram, when it comes to instant recognition, it is hard to beat Flickr Explore. The eyeballs today for photography are mostly on Instagram, and if you want your work to be seen you need to go where the eyeballs are, despite the formidable limitations that Instagram has for serious photographers (it is designed best for mobile photography). Whatever one’s opinion of the merits of the two versions, most of this vast difference in audience appreciation can be attributed to the inclusion of the recent one in Flickr Explore. In contrast, the reprocessed version on Flickr after about 36 hours has 10, 558 views and 575 Faves, and counting upwards. Three months out the original version on Flickr has 173 views and 4 Faves (“Faves” are the Flickr version of “likes”). I also removed a small texture effect-which you can mostly see in the sky of the original version-so the reprocessed version is a cleaner, simpler, and starker image, although the differences between the two versions are really pretty subtle. I reprocessed the image at the behest of a client, who wanted me to take down the crepuscular rays a bit (those rays were really there!). This is a reprocessed version of the original image, which I originally photographed, processed, and posted in October 2018 ( link to the original story here). My monochromatic image Crepuscular Coast (shown above) hit Flickr Explore yesterday.
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