Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Facebook Starts Letting iOS Users Auto-Upload All Their Snapshots With Photo Sync



Facebook Photo Sync iOS
It’s not just for Android anymore. Either through API savvy or its iOS bake-in deal with Apple, Facebook figured out how to enable background auto-uploads and is now testing Photo Sync with a few iOS users. A tipster got us a screenshot and Facebook confirms iOS Photo Sync is a continuation of its two-month old test for Android. It could box out Google+ Instant Uploads and get more photos shared.
Here’s how Facebook Photo Sync works, at least for those lucky enough to be in the test. You go to the Photos app in the Facebook For iOS app’s sidebar navigation or the photos section of your Timeline and scroll to the bottom. There you may find an option to check out Photo Sync and then enable it, as seen in this photo sent in by tipster YoloFahad (an Instagrammer-extraordinaire).
Facebook will then automatically upload photos you shoot to an unpublished album only you can see. From there you can authorize which photos you want posted. More details on enabling and disabling Photo Sync can be found in the Facebook Help Center, which we discovered now notes the feature’s presence on iOS. By default Facebook tries to upload photos immediately, but you can configure it to avoid burning your data plan.
The feature is a big deal for Facebook since photos are a core driver of return visits and time on site. Most people take way more photos with their phones than they upload to Facebook and the social network wants to close the gap. Instead of having to manually choose photos and wait for them to upload, Photo Sync makes this all very low friction, which could drastically boost the number of photos people publish.
So why didn’t Facebook already have this for iOS? Two reasons. The first is privacy — a delicate thing when you’re talking about auto-uploading photos people might not want anyone to see. Facebook had to make sure it had the messaging perfect so users wouldn’t panic,  wrongly thinking their grandma just saw their private, booze-soaked, scantly-clad pre-party photos.
The second reason is more technical. On Android where developers can basically do whatever they want with anything on the phone, engineering Photo Sync was easy. Facebook started testing the feature there in September, as reported by The Verge. On the rigidly controlled iOS? Not so simple. Facebook is being cagey with the details on how exactly it accomplished the feat, saying only that photos get uploaded while the app is open or running in the background. Experts in the mobile photo space tell me it may be utilizing some location APIs. Alternatively, Apple could have hooked Facebook up with the power as part of its expansive integration into iOS.
Either way, it could keep Google+ Instant Uploads from becoming a threat. Google started showing off the feature in June 2011. Then at the I/O Conference a year later it  announced a cool integration with Google+ Events called Party Mode which immediately stuck out to me as a selling point over iOS and Facebook. In fact, I’ve heard hints that Facebook may be working a Party Mode competitor.
Right now, between the 300 million images uploaded every day and its acquisition of Instagram, Facebook is winning the photo race by a mile. If it rolls out Photo Sync to all iOS and Android users and it catches on, it’ll take an Olympic miracle for anyone to catch up.

http://techcrunch.com/2012/11/19/facebook-photo-sync/

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