Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Mobile
  4. Photography
  5. Legacy Archives

Vine hits Android, so now everyone you know can make looping videos

Add as a preferred source on Google

Screen Shot 2013-06-03 at 10.36.04 AMApple often gets first dibs when it comes to app releases, but Android users’ wait for one of the hottest new apps out there is now over – Vine is now available for Android phones running Ice Cream Sandwich and up. And loyal Galaxy S3 users seething at the fact that they had to wait for months to get the popular looping-video creator on their phones might be ameliorated by the fact that Vine has included a few unique features in this version. For phones that support it, you can now zoom in, and there’s a juiced-up offline browsing mode.

Vine noted that the iOS version and Android version aren’t quite synced up yet. “Though we’ve been very focused on releasing Vine for Android, we’ve continued to release updates and add new features to the iOS app. As a result, the two apps are not perfectly in sync, but that won’t be the case for long. Over the coming weeks, you’ll see frequent updates with new features – including front-facing camera, search, mentions, and hashtags, and the ability to share to Facebook – as well as bug fixes and performance improvements. Of course, this is only the beginning – we have exciting plans for features that could exist only on Android.”

Recommended Videos

This means Vine for Android won’t have some of the latest features introduced on iOS, so if Apple users still want something to gloat about, now’s the time to rub it in that this version is still inferior. But it’s likely that the two versions will resemble each other more closely very soon.

Vine is still a young app, but it’s already expanding like crazy, and it established a branded partnership with “Peanuts” last month. Letting Android users in on the fun will give the platform plenty of new potential users, and help it become a mainstay like Instagram.

Kate Knibbs
Former Contributor
Kate Knibbs is a writer from Chicago. She is very happy that her borderline-unhealthy Internet habits are rewarded with a…
TikTok’s AI slop problem is worse than you think — and kids are seeing the most of it
TikTok

TikTok has spent years perfecting the art of knowing exactly what you want to watch next. Open the app, scroll a few times, and suddenly it’s serving videos that feel uncannily tailored to your interests. But what happens before TikTok learns who you are? According to new research from video editing platform Kapwing, the answer is increasingly AI slop.

The study found that nearly 60% of the videos shown to a brand-new TikTok account were low-quality AI-generated content. That’s not a niche problem buried in obscure corners of the platform. It’s the first impression TikTok is making on new users before the algorithm even begins personalizing their feed. And if that sounds concerning, the findings around children’s content are even harder to ignore.

Read more
Your Instagram photo dumps just got a caption for every single slide
One toggle, up to 20 captions, and finally a reason to write something for every slide.
Clothing, Hardhat, Helmet

Instagram just made one of its most popular post formats significantly more useful. 

Starting today, you can add a unique caption to every single slide in a carousel post. So, instead of one caption trying to explain up to 20 different photos, each slide gets its own text underneath. It is the kind of addition that makes me wonder why it took this long.

Read more
TikTok feeds show 3 times more AI slop than YouTube, study reveals
Kids content has the highest AI slop rate on TikTok.
TikTok

If you have ever felt like your TikTok feed is mostly fake content, you are not imagining it. A new report from Kapwing found that 59% of videos served to a brand-new TikTok account are AI slop. That is roughly three times the rate Kapwing found when it ran the same test on YouTube.

How bad is TikTok's AI slop problem compared to YouTube?

Read more