Word: uploaders
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...Digital Photography Flickr flickr.com This public showroom for personal pics just might be the fastest-growing social network on the Web, and it's completely addictive. You upload your images and assign each an identifying tag; these tags help other members find your stuff, and you theirs. You can join groups and create new ones, post comments about particular images and designate favorites. Free membership is limited to 20 megabytes worth of uploads per month. Turn Pro and pay $25 a year for a host of other perks...
...your own. It takes just a few minutes to register, and your profile can be as vague or specific as you like. Provide an email address to be included in the directory and to receive group emails. You can add events to the calendar, recommend cleaning ladies and handymen, upload photos, even contact elected officials (see GovLink). Of course, whether a neighborhood thrives or dies depends on the participation of its members. Is yours a ghost town? The site provides a ready-to-print flyer for posting at the gym or corner deli to help advertise the link and drum...
...version of the Korea-based "open-source" news organization invites readers to become "citizen reporters" and contribute their own news stories, opinion pieces and photo essays. ("Say bye-bye to the backwards newspaper culture of the 20th Century," beckons the membership registration page.) Use the Talk Back forum to upload...
...Storage Briefcase securely stores your files so you can access them from any computer. Simply log into Briefcase using your Yahoo username and password from any PC to upload, access or share up to 30 MB worth of content for free. More space will cost you: 50 MB runs $3 per month or $25 per year, 100 MB more is $5 per month or $35 per year. If that's still insufficient, try Streamload.The service offers up to 10 GB storage for free with access to 100 MB of it per month; or, for a $10 monthly...
...into your PC and click on its icon. CVS' own program starts up, allowing you to send particular clips one at a time or joined into a continuous movie. You input e-mail addresses and off it goes. Broadband is better when you're uploading your video: a 5-minute clip can easily take 10 minutes to upload, even on a high-speed connection. But even if it's going to multiple addresses, it only has to upload it one time. Recipients get just a link that they click to download and watch the video...