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by Sam_Odio
5975 days ago
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> Sure, I wish it supported higher resolutions, but the medium-res images are good enough for 95% of people. Where did you get 95%? I've heard this before yet I don't know of anyone (besides us) who's actually taken the time to ask users if med-res is good enough. When founding Divvyshot I used Amazon mechanical turk to conduct a quick market survey (with hundreds of respondents). A few highlights: 77% of respondents knew what hi-resolution photos were and preferred them. 43% had manually increased the resolution setting on their camera. 77% had been promised photos from a social event within the last few months and had never received them. |
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Email is still no alternative. Gmail, for example, has a 25 MB limit. Good for maybe five photos. Something like dropbox might be. (But you cannot share there if your friends don’t have accounts.) – edit: Ah, just noticed that’s seemingly also the case with divvyshot.
Well, that’s a problem you should work on – I cannot and will not force my friends to sign up for anything when I just want to share photos. That sort of defeats the whole purpose. There already is a unholy proliferation of all kinds of services you need a password for. That’s nice if all you want is a nice collection of great tools (you can pick and chose and end up only with a handful) but not so nice if you have to force your friends to sign up when you want to use the thing for one of its main use cases.
I bet you could make it possible to download and maybe even contribute (adding photos by sending them via Email, maybe?) without needing to sign up. Your use cases should work without me having to force people to sign up and hate me and your service as a consequence.
I know your whole signup process is dead simple (make it even simpler be not having people type their password twice) and you don’t even need to use your real Email address and you don’t even send out a welcome Email (all great things, really, I wish everyone were like you) but I know quite a few people (and not just nerds) who are allergic to any kind of signup form.