Premium members can host 250 10 minute clips plus 25 additional for each subscribing month.īefore year’s end, Webshots plans to add a Flash slideshow manager that will allow users to view photos and videos together.
Webshots mobile free#
Free members are allowed 100 five-minute clips, and earn the ability to upload 10 additional clips for each month of membership.
The site supports free and paid membership, and will allow video hosting for both platforms. Webshots boasts that its video player has a 50 percent larger viewing area and almost three-times the bitrate of other video sites.
Webshots mobile movie#
The movie appears as part of the user’s photo album. When users submit files, they can select file types to denote still images and video. Video has been worked into the site in the same way photos and text appear throughout. Inventory running on the site’s family channel is sold out through the end of the year. Since it launched channels in September it has sold channel sponsorships to companies including Casio, Sony, Olympus, Fox TV’s “Justice”, Best Buy, T-Mobile, Cingular and Pedigree. Om Malik, founder of Giga Omni Media, is also a venture partner at True.“They can align with a relevant theme to protect the brand with their standards and protect the integrity of the site,” Green said.ĬNET is hopeful about selling advertising on the video channel and branded pages carrying clips.
Webshots mobile android#
Former Webshots executives Julie Davidson, Narendra Rocherolle and Nick Wilder are now on the Board of Directors for Threefold Photos.īeginning Tuesday, existing Webshots users will start receiving notices that their photos will be migrated to Smile, which currently has iPhone and desktop apps, with Android coming within a month. Rocherolle and CEO Mike Sitrin explained in an interview that they want Smile to be the easiest way to search and share photos, although they were light on specifics as they focus on transitioning existing users to the new service.ĭisclosure: Threefold Photos is backed by True Ventures, a venture capital firm that is an investor in the parent company of this blog, Giga Omni Media. In 2004, CNET bought Webshots for $71 million, which sold it to American Greetings for $45 million in 2007. In 2001 declared bankrupcy, and the founders purchased Webshots back for $2.5 million. In 1999, the founders sold Webshots to for $82.5 million in stock. Webshots was founded in 1995, and by 1999 had moved the product into photo-sharing as well as the original screensavers and wallpaper. Older photo sites like Photobucket and Flickr have certainly struggled to find new footing. However, it’s hard to say how a photo-sharing site can compete in the age of Facebook and Instagram, which dominate the photo upload and sharing experiences. Smile will roll out a variety of features this fall, but core to the experience will be a photo stream aggregating user photos that are easily searchable and shareable, targeting a user demographic that might not always upload to Facebook or iCloud. Threefold Photos (see disclosure below) has purchased Webshots from American Greetings for an undisclosed sum, and has taken investments from groups and individuals including Freestyle Capital, True Ventures, Chris Sacca, Biz Stone, Mike Hirshland, and others. Threefold Photos plans to announce Tuesday that it has purchased Webshots and will re-launch the product this fall, transitioning it to become a more modern photo experience called Smile by Webshots. Believe it or not, Webshots, the photo company founded in the mid 1990s, is still hanging around, but soon its service will go by a slightly different name after another change in company ownership.