The site also seems to be defaulting to the mobile view on the photo pages but the desktop view on every other page and I'd really appreciate a workaround as I find the mobile version utterly useless. Now I cannot select or copy the BBcode and it's really getting me down. I use my iPhone 5 for posting on forums far more than my PC, and up until this latest update I could embed images via flickr no bother. Sharing in a discussion forum is no different than sharing on facebook, or any other social site. Images on their for sale site are directly uploaded from my hard drive. You cannot use Flickr to host images for sale on Craigslist.Ī CL discussion forum is not a for sale site. Please bring back my ability to embed my public domain pics on craigslist forums. Off to check if the new code is active on own account. (1 to 100 of 536 replies in New version of Flickr's embed code) As Flickr users ourselves, we love the attribution, title, and license information shown automatically on our photos, and we hope you will too. We’re really excited about this new embed code. This might be the case in RSS readers, message boards, and some blogging platforms that don’t support the Flickr javascript/iframe (yet!). If the “fancy” embed is not supported, it will always fall back to the standard image. If the code is used somewhere that supports the “fancy” embed, it will load automatically and look like this: The new embed code is exactly the same as the “old” HTML code, with a few new additions to permit dynamically loading the full embed if supported. When the new embed code is activated for your account, you will see only one option in the HTML embed sharing section: maybe you’ve noticed? Now we're ready to roll this feature out to everyone, and we'd love your feedback. We’ve already been using the new embed code for months on the Flickr Blog. If the “fancy” embed isn’t supported or something goes wrong, the standard image will still load. The way we’re accomplishing this is through “progressive enhancement.” This means that at the core of the new embed, we start with the same HTML image tag that has always been on Flickr, and if supported, we load the more sophisticated, enhanced embed. This new code brings the features of the “iframe” web embeds and the compatibility of standard HTML image embeds together into a single code. Today we’re excited to start rolling out a new version of our HTML embed code, with more visible attribution of the photo owner and enhanced features. Hi, I’m Chris, an engineer here at Flickr. Welcome to the Flickr Help Forum! Click here to get started and to read ourĪPI error - Sorry, the Flickr API service is not currently available. Flickr forever: Creating the safest most inclusive This thread was closed automatically due to a lack of responses over the last month.įlickr staff requesting help from members in the UK to troubleshoot slowness
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |