News

FilmLoop’s desktop and other software will play a part in a future Fabrik consumer storage product. SimpleTech, also acquired by Fabrik and announced today, will provide another piece of the ...
Filmloop raised $7 million from ComVentures in May of last year. Nine months later, with $3 million reportedly still in the bank, investors shut it down. We don’t know the full story yet.
With the release of FilmLoop 2.0 impending, it could be a good time to look at some good news and some bad news about the company. First, a slide show to demonstrate my personal use of the product.
To help its efforts, the 29-person firm will hire about nine more employees by the end of the year. Mashima said his conversations with VCs have included discussions about FilmLoop's ultimate fate.
Essentially, FilmLoop treats photos and photo streams as something entirely fluid. The idea is that any user can create a photo loop. Once created, a loop becomes something like a tray of moving ...
Guy Kawasaki gave one of his patented demos, evangelizing for FilmLoop, a photo sharing company he has invested in that is run by his old friend (since 9th grade) and former Apple colleague Kyle ...
Except for Intel-based hardware, the big thing here at Macworld seems to be syndicating photos over the net — or Photocasting. Not only did Steve Jobs showcase a new photocasting feature in ...
FilmLoop was founded last year, but the idea for the company came in 1999, while Mashima worked for Adobe Systems and was collaborating on a photo-sharing project with the then-CEO of social ...
FilmLoop also functions as a social network via its images. Once a user has created a loop from their images, they can mark the collection as available to the public and send the images out for ...
FilmLoop, which said it has grown to over 400,000 users since its launch in November, expects to use the funding to develop its photocasting technology and self-publishing tools, and grow its ...
FilmLoop was one of the few third-party announcements at Macworld that stirred any interest. If you're unfamiliar with it...don't worry, you're not missin' much. It's basically an app designed to ...
FilmLoop released beta software for the Macintosh on Monday. Simply, FilmLoop is a free desktop program that lets people drag and drop photos into a file, then view those pictures on the desktop ...