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by Jare 3975 days ago
Instagram. I still don't get it. Vanity filters sure, there were dozens and there must now be hundreds of such apps, but a separate social network just for that?
7 comments

I can't claim to have foreseen Instagram's success...but to me, it's one of the best and prominent examples of how removing friction can be a completely new product...well, when you think about it, even Facebook itself became hugely successful by reducing the friction of getting to know people and keeping tabs on old friends.

But Instagram's value proposition is subtler than Facebook's...I remember that Hipstamatic and its filters was all the rage among my amateur cameraphotographer friends...it was so dominant that Pulitzer Prize-winner Damon Winter of the New York Times used it in his war photography [1].

But IIRC, Hipstamatic did not at all care about the concept of social networking...although perhaps what made it lose to Instagram was the fact that it cost money. I was very slow to take up Instagram because I keep an active Flickr (pro/paid) account...but now I see that Instagram's main value is not attractive photos, but its minimalist, sleek social features. The appeal of phone photography in general is that it constrains the amount of thinking/editing you can do...Instagram's filters ease the tradeoff of quality/ease and its networking features reduce even further the friction of showing the world what you just saw. And you have few options to elaborate on the photo, other than a caption and some tagging...I still like using Facebook, but Instagram works very well on its own because it's not just a filtered visual view, but its constraints limit the kind of things that piss people off about Facebook...for example, it's considerably more difficult to get into political arguments on Instagram.

[1] http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/21/finding-the-right-t...

I thought that initially (Android, couldn't get it) - I can put filters on my photos in a proper editing package. Then I'd tried it and I was like "oh right, I get it now". I suppose the way it makes sense to me now - my friends put 900 pictures of their holiday on Facebook. They put the one picture that defines their holiday(/day/event) on Instagram. It makes so much difference. Add into that the celebrity voyeurism, and there you have it.
I think the fact that it is a separate social network is actually a huge part of its draw. I use Instagram on the daily, but haven't used Facebook in a good four years.

Facebook is just too full of garbage that is irrelevant to my interests as well as stupid ads. Instagram, on the other hand, is still basically ad free, and has interesting content I care about, easily consumed without having to dig through tons of cruft that I don't care about.

Flickr had a lot of strong social elements to it in 2005. I guess sharing photos is something computers are really good for. This article seems to do an okay job of outlining the history:

http://gizmodo.com/5910223/how-yahoo-killed-flickr-and-lost-...

Similarly, Twitter. Status updates are great, but a separate social network just for that?
Agreed. It took me a while to join Twitter. I was reluctant at first because I thought: "Why the hell would anyone want to hear my random thoughts?" I didn't realize that I was the one who wanted to hear OTHER people's random thoughts.
same here, it's like subscribing to everyone's facebook when i can barely tolerate my own facebook feed
This one is actually something I can undestand seeing all my friends and a lot of girls obsessed with "making pictures" all the time wherever we go.
This! And twitter, and snapchat.