stories

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  • Facebook and Messenger’s new camera filter, stickers focus on mental health

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    10.10.2019

    In honor of World Mental Health Day, Facebook has launched a couple of features that it hopes will bring awareness to the cause and help people who may need emotional support. For starters, it worked with the World Health Organization (WHO) to create a camera filter for Facebook and Messenger Stories called "Let's Talk," which the company says is designed to be an invitation for friends or family to reach out for support if they're struggling. According to Facebook, based on a survey it conducted in the US, UK and Australia, 80 percent of people who participated said they could be more honest when using messaging apps, rather than speaking to someone in person -- hence why it thinks these features could be helpful.

  • Jane Manchun Wong/Twitter

    Instagram tests Group Stories after Facebook ditched them

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.05.2019

    Facebook might not be giving up on Group Stories just because it's cutting them from its main app. App sleuther Jane Manchun Wong has found test code for a Group Story feature in Instagram. There's no mystery to how it works -- you'd just choose to "share to Group Story." Still, it could be helpful for those moments when you'd like to recap your adventures for a smaller social circle beyond those you've marked as Close Friends.

  • Facebook

    Facebook will shut down Group Stories on September 26th

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.22.2019

    If you didn't find yourself using Facebook's Group Stories, you're not the only one. The social network has confirmed a report from commentator Matt Navarra that it's shutting down Group Stories on September 26th at 12PM Eastern. After that, Facebook will both delete any existing Stories and prevent users from creating new ones. Individual Stories will remain intact, of course.

  • Google

    Google Photos has a new stories-style 'Memories' feature

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    09.12.2019

    The cameras on our phones keep getting better, and we keep taking more and more pictures. That presents a challenge for for Apple and Google: how to surface the best moments out of the thousands of photos we shoot every year? iOS 13 has a new intelligent view that shows users highlights from any day, month or year, and now Google's making some changes to its Photos apps to help people see meaningful pics from the past. Unsurprisingly, the new feature is called Memories, and it uses the popular "stories" format you'll see in Snapchat and Instagram to show you photos from your past.

  • Facebook

    Facebook adds new ways for public figures to make money and stay safe

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    09.10.2019

    Facebook wants to make it easier for famous people to engage with their fans on the site. That's why the company is launching new ways for Facebook users to interact with public figures they follow, be it internet creators, authors, athletes or sports teams. As part of these efforts, Facebook has started testing a feature that will let multiple public figure accounts contribute to the same Facebook Story during an event, plus a new tool in News Feed that's going to recommend people public figures they should follow. These suggestions, naturally, will be based on content you've engaged with on Facebook or other famous people you follow already.

  • Spotify

    Spotify lets you add 15-second song clips to Facebook Stories

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    08.30.2019

    Beginning today, Spotify will let users share 15-second clips of Spotify songs on their Facebook Stories. If followers tap on the preview, they'll be transferred to Spotify, where they can listen to the rest of the track. The change is geared toward musicians, and Spotify calls it "a more powerful way to connect with fans." But anyone will be able to use the new feature.

  • Thomas Trutschel via Getty Images

    Tidal shares songs as Stories in Facebook and Instagram

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.20.2019

    iHeartRadio isn't the only streaming music service helping you share music as Stories in recent days. Tidal has introduced an option to share tunes directly as Stories in Facebook and Instagram, helping you convey your musical mood to your followers. You can share videos, too -- viewers will see 15-second snippets of concerts and other footage if you post clips on Instagram, and still images on Facebook.

  • Facebook

    Prepare yourselves for a deluge of new AR filters on Instagram

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    08.13.2019

    As of today, anyone can create AR filters and effects for Instagram. Facebook has opened Spark AR -- the tool responsible for pretty much every AR experience you've encountered across Facebook's products -- to the Instagramming public.

  • Charles Sykes/Invision/AP

    Snapchat launches Creator Shows with Serena Williams and Kevin Hart

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    07.10.2019

    In the last year, the time spent watching Shows on Snapchat has tripled. The company wants to take advantage of that. Today, it announced Creator Shows, a new format that will deliver regularly published content from some of Snapchat's most popular stars. It's also adding a Highlights feature, which will let Creators add longer-lasting photos and videos to their profiles.

  • bombuscreative via Getty Images

    Instagram's latest Stories sticker is a direct link to group chats

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    07.02.2019

    Instagram is introducing a new feature that will let users start private group messages around specific Stories. The company announced the change on Twitter today. Users will soon be able to add a "join chat" sticker to their Stories. If followers tap the sticker, they'll be added to a private group chat -- though the author will have the ability to approve or deny requests.

  • Instagram

    Instagram's revamped Explore section includes Stories

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.16.2019

    Stories are an increasingly important part of Instagram, and the social network wants to be sure you see more of them. It just unveiled a revamped Explore tab that will feature personalized Stories recommendations. You won't have to track down a specific person (or rely on the carousel on your home feed) to watch ephemeral videos. The feature will roll out in the "coming weeks," Instagram said, so don't worry if you don't see Stories right away.

  • Jon Fingas/Engadget

    Spotify tests a version of Stories for artists

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.13.2019

    Count Spotify among the ranks of internet giants duping Snapchat's Stories feature. The streaming music service has confirmed an Android Police report that it's testing a Storyline feature where musicians can share Stories-style content, whether it's making-of trivia or a song's influences. This isn't the same as Behind the Lyrics, which pulls data from Genius -- artists and their managers have to work with Spotify directly.

  • TechCrunch/AOL

    Facebook may combine your News Feed and Stories into one carousel

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    04.15.2019

    It looks like Facebook may be testing a way to combine your News Feed and Stories into one swipeable, hybrid carousel. On Twitter this morning, Jane Manchun Wong -- a software engineer who's spotted changes like Twitter's "subscribe to conversation" button -- reported that Facebook is demoing the new format. The GIF Wong shared shows her News Feed in a Stories-like carousel.

  • Instagram

    An Instagram bug briefly showed Stories to strangers

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    04.11.2019

    Early this week, an Instagram bug caused users' Stories to show up in strangers' Stories trays. At least one user reported the problem on Twitter, and an Instagram spokesperson confirmed the glitch. Considering the hype around privacy concerns, especially when it comes to Instagram's parent company Facebook, this is a significant blunder.

  • Neilson Barnard via Getty Images

    Snapchat can survive, but it can't do it alone

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    04.09.2019

    Snap Inc. co-founder and CEO Evan Spiegel kicked off the first-ever Partner Summit last week in Los Angeles with a sort of syrupy soliloquy about how the Snapchat camera "lets natural light from our world penetrate the darkness of the internet." He went on to say the internet was "started as a military research project" and, therefore, "it's just not our natural habitat." The point Spiegel was trying to make (I think) is that building a platform like the internet is a collaborative process. And he sees Snapchat as a world where good things can happen, but he doesn't want to build it alone.

  • Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images

    Snapchat Stories are coming to Tinder

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    04.04.2019

    Tinder ditched its Moments feature in 2015, but that doesn't mean the popular dating app is done with giving users access to ephemeral (aka disappearing) content. Later this year, those of you on Tinder can start posting Snapchat Stories directly to your dating profile, Snap announced today at its Partner Summit in Los Angeles. Thanks to Snap Kit, which lets third-party apps use Snapchat's augmented reality camera, you'll be able to use send Snaps to a new "My Tinder Story" option right inside the app. That means you'll have to use Snapchat if you want to use this feature, as the Tinder app will only be used for viewing, rather than publishing, your Snaps.

  • PA Wire/PA Images

    Instagram finally tests a fast-forward feature for videos

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    03.29.2019

    In a move so overdue you're probably checking the date stamp on this article, Instagram could finally be about to launch a seek bar on videos posted on users' feeds. The feature, discovered by app researcher Jane Manchun Wong, would let you skip backwards and forwards through a video without having to start it again from the beginning (as every other video player ever made already allows).

  • Engadget

    Twitter's revamped camera is its answer to Stories

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    03.13.2019

    There were rumors flying around recently of Twitter working on a "News Camera," which would bring a Stories-style feature to the social network. And, well, it turns out that's partially true. At SXSW 2019, Twitter is launching a revamped camera for its app that will make it easier to tweet pictures and videos. This new camera, which starts rolling out to users today, has the potential to be one of the biggest changes to Twitter in the past few years -- right up there with the company's shift to 280 characters. While that may be the case, the new feature still feels very much like Twitter though, not a clone of Snapchat or Instagram Stories.

  • Engadget

    Snapchat is in the middle of an identity crisis

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    02.22.2019

    There was a time a year or so ago when, if a friend wanted to send me a meme or a funny selfie, it would be on Snapchat. But I don't remember the last time that happened; at some point Instagram became our go-to messaging app. And apparently I'm not alone: Snapchat lost as many as 3 million daily users in 2018. Meanwhile, Instagram has grown so fast over the past two years that its Stories feature alone is much bigger than Snapchat, with more than 500 million daily users. This has arguably come at Snapchat's expense. But it's not as if Snap isn't looking to turn things around. The company wants to reinvent itself by trying a bunch of different things, like augmented reality shopping, being more open and teaming up with brands such as Nike on AR workshops.

  • Zoa-Arts via Getty Images

    Instagram will support fundraisers using Story stickers

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    02.19.2019

    Facebook's fundraising tool has raised over $1 billion for non-profits and personal causes since its launch, and now it looks like a similar feature will be rolled out to Instagram later this year. As TechCrunch reports, engineers Jane Manchun Wong and Ishan Agarwal have been digging around in the code of Instagram's Android App and have found a donation sticker, which will let users search for non-profits and add a donate button to their Instagram Story.