Facebook's Moments app was introduced last June as an easier way for people to share photos with their friends. Now a new update has widened Moments' scope, adding support for video, as well as pictures. The app â available on iOS nd Android â scans through your smartphone's photo roll using facial recognition technology to spot photos of specific pals, allowing you to automatically tag them without arduous busywork, and making it easier for you to share them directly with the people included in...
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Facebook's photo-sharing Moments app now supports video too 0
March 1st at 11:29am / The Verge / 0 opinions -
The 12 best iPhone apps of 2015 0
December 23rd at 4:45pm / Mashable / 0 opinionsFrom beautiful new games to apps that helped supercharge our productivity, many apps became new favorites in 2015.
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5 can't-miss apps: 'Fallen,' Inkboard, Ditty and more 2
August 30th at 6:25am / Mashable / 0 opinionsThis week's list includes an app to send doodles to your friends, an update to Facebook's newest standalone app and a new gravity-based game.
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Facebook Moments turns your photos into music videos 0
August 26th at 1:22am / Macworld / 0 opinionsNew update to standalone photo-sharing app automatically creates short videos from your photo collection.
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Facebook’s New Moments App Now Automatically Creates Music Videos From Your Photos 0
August 25th at 7:43pm / TechCrunch / 0 opinionsFacebook Moments, the social network’s recently launched photo-sharing app which aims to address the problem of getting friends to send each other the photos they’ve been hoarding on their own phones, is expanding to video. The app received its first major update today since its mid-June debut, and will now automatically create a video of your shared photos which you can…
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Facebook releases Moments app to rescue photos of your friends from your camera roll 0
June 20th at 6:49pm / The Verge / 0 opinionsIn April, wrapping up our piece about the best way to manage your photos online in 2015, I lamented that companies didnât seem to be taking the problem all that seriously. Plenty of internet giants were happy to store your photos, but few were really doing anything with them. And then, as if on cue, internet giants revealed ambitious new offerings. Flickr unveiled helpful new tools for uploading your entire archive to the cloud, plus machine vision for organizing it. Google Photos then matched those...
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Facebook releases a separate app for private photo sharing 2
June 15th at 11:22pm / Macworld / 0 opinionsMoments will automatically detect people's friends in their smartphone camera roll.