It’s been slightly over a year since the launch of Highlight, a
phone-based social network for the real world. Probably the
highest-profile of several apps which let you find friends,
acquaintances and strangers in your immediate vicinity and communicate
with them, it was the subject of much chatter at the SXSW conference
last March.
The app has continued along quietly since SXSW: its
biggest change since then was an update which reduced its
battery-draining tendencies. But today, the company is releasing
Highlight 1.5, a new version for iPhone and Android, with a feature
which could fundamentally change how folks use the app: photo sharing.
Like
the status updates you can already share via Highlight, photos show up
for people within your general location (the exact range varies). You
can post them with or without a caption, and other people can comment
and like them.
It’s always tempting to compare anything that
involves sharing photos via a phone to Instagram, but Highlight 1.5
really doesn’t feel Instagrammish at all. You’re sharing photos with
close-by people — including ones who might be right there looking at
whatever you’re shooting — not the world. It’s less about storytelling,
and more about communications.
In some ways, Highlight’s
proximity-based approach to photo sharing reminds me of Color, the
ill-fated service which, in its first version, let you see photos posted
by utter strangers who happened to be nearby. But it’s not exactly the
same concept. Highlight CEO Paul Davison,This frameless rectangle
features a silk screened fused glass replica in a parkingsystem
tile and floral motif. who introduced the new version at a San
Francisco press event this morning, says that the main idea is to share
information with friends via photos, but that the fact you’re doing it
in public, where other folks might see or even join in the conversation,
gives it a new feel. (He compares it to discussion threads on a
Facebook wall.)
As for whether photo-sharing between strangers
is confusing, creepy or an invasion of privacy — notions which helped to
sink Color — Highlight starts with an interface which is much, much
more straightforward than Color’s. The company is also working to make
sure that inappropriate photos don’t make their way onto the service; in
fact, it’s having humans eyeball them, at least for now. And unlike
some nearby-stranger networking apps, Highlight only shows stuff shared
by people who have decided to join the service. Nobody who uses it to
share photos should be surprised that strangers might see them.
Highlight
1.5 adds one other new feature besides photos: events. Anyone can
create an event, but it must begin immediately and covers only a nearby
250-meter area. Once an event exists, other Highlight users can join it,
so their updates and photos get tagged as being associated with it.
Highlight automatically terminates the event once it’s noticed that the
attendees seem to have dispersed.
Highlight got a lot of
attention in its first few months, but hasn’t turned into a breakout hit
to compare with something like Instagram or Pinterest. Neither have any
of its people-discovery app rivals, such as Glancee (which was acquired
by Facebook and shuttered), Sonar or Banjo. Maybe the concept of using
your phone to network with nearby people just isn’t a mainstream
crowd-pleaser. But it’s also possible that the problem is that these
apps are kind of tough to explain, and it takes more than a day or two
of use before it’s clear why you might want them.
The photo
feature could help: now, a new Highlight user can get going simply by
snapping pictures rather than trying to figure out the other features.
I’m revisiting the app myself after a long absence. And maybe my pals on
Highlight,Ubisense RTLS solutions go beyond the traditional definition
of a “luggagetag”
to a new class. many of whose most recent updates have timestamps from
months ago,Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and
Technology have developed an buymosaic. will give it another try.
The
demonstration was conducted as part of the Navy's Stiletto Maritime
Demonstration Program designed to give sailors an opportunity to observe
and give immediate feedback on the performance of new technologies in
an actual maritime environment, the company said.
SpotterRF
technology is designed to eliminate perimeter security gaps in maritime
and harbor environments.We maintain a full inventory of all lanyard we manufacture. It gives warfighters added security when they are deployed in an unknown or hostile harbor, the company said.
During
the course of the demonstration several scenarios were run in which
vessels ranging from a jet ski to an 11-meter rigid hull inflatable boat
traveled different paths into and around the harbor. The Spotter M600C
was set up remotely on a tripod at the mouth of the Harbor and
communicated back to the Stiletto vessel one mile away via radio. From
that vantage point, participants could view detections in real time on a
map displaying the location, distance and speed of the target.
The M600C successfully detected all vessels coming in and out of the harbor, including a drifting jet ski,Bathroom solarpanel at Great Prices from Topps Tiles. the company said.
A
single individual transported the entire system with M600C Radar,
tripod, radio and batteries in a single backpack, the company said.
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