Ryan Hoover

Boomerang by Instagram - Create and share 1-second video loops

Capture moving photo loops with Boomerang by Instagram. It captures 10 pictures, smoothens them out and there you go, you have the perfect, moving back and forth, mini GIF of the moment that will never end. Have fun with your friends creating amazing GIFs and share them on your social media.

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Ryan Hoover
Hyperlapse, Layout, and now Boomerang. Instagram is building an ecosystem of photo/video-based apps. Check out @joshconstine's writeup on TechCrunch and here's their video:
I'm downloading it now. :) UPDATE: my first Boomerang
Chris Messina
@rrhoover this app is so millennial. The product video is all young people. The competition for the attention of the youth market (aka the future) is enormous.
Pierre-Marie Galite
@chrismessina @rrhoover It's all about "me" and less about "you".
Kamil
@rrhoover Very cool!
Ross Currie
@rrhoover Really interesting what you were saying about building the ecosystem of photo/video-based apps. Someone just posted in MakerHunt the other day an article related to how side projects are a new form of marketing. Buffer releasing the social media resizer this past week being a perfect example. I was just thinking to myself this morning about the fact that Instagram hadn't yet gone this route.
Ryan Hoover
@mikeyk - I just made my first Boomerang and like your other "side" apps (Hyperlapse and Layout), you've built a super simple onboarding flow without a signup hurdle. Well done. Where'd the idea for Boomerang come from?
Mike Krieger
@rrhoover similar to Hyperlapse, actually--a small group of engineers at one of our hackathons stayed up all night and built a demo, we were excited enough to see it through the door. It uses some of the same stabilization tech as Hyperlapse on iOS, too
Kevin
It's like a combination of PHHHOTO and Live Photos
Christian Blomberg
@kevinayuque was just thinking the same.
Tiger Wang ☻
@kevinayuque Phhhoto killer, diplo is going to be mad
Jonathan Kupferman
Instagram is really nailing these small utility apps that feed back into their main app (and facebook). The very minimal intro is great. It's basically just permission dialogues and you are good to go. - It's interesting that they always immediately save it to your camera roll, no prompt or anything. In my experience with photo apps people delete/don't save the result quite often (a majority of the time). Then again you can always clean up your camera roll later. - I like that they are short but to me it feels a little *too short*. I found myself struggling to do something interesting within that one second. Capturing something with movement often meant I had to move myself (or the camera) so fast that it became blurry/jerky. - It's funny that in order for the videos to be long enough to post on Instagram (with their 3 second minimum) they had to take the one-second loop, reverse it and then play that twice to get to 4 seconds.
Mike Krieger
@jkupferman the repeated also helps with making sure the iOS and Android video players/loopers can handle it properly. When the video is too short we found we'd get more stutters.
Owen Williams
Cool app, but feels like it's been sherlocked by Apple's Live Photos just before it was released.
Mike Krieger
@ow curious why you think so--I've found they have very different use cases. Boomerang is high-intent, Live Photos (to me so far at least) have been nice bonuses on existing photos, but I don't find myself staging Live Photos intentionally
Carylyne Chan
@ow That was exactly what I was thinking when I saw it. Especially since Live Photos makes the loops endemic to photo taking on the phone now, this seems to have slightly less value. Though I think @mikeyk's explanation of intent makes sense - it's probably just that it's easier to share on the platform than the simple function of having a 1-sec loop on any photo?
Josh Puetz
Yup, this seems just like Phhhoto, but thankfully with the ability to save and share loops. Couple of issues: - no filters :( - no built in way to save movie as a gif
Tim Lenardo
@joshpuetz Hey - I'm the engineer that originally built Boomerang as a hackathon project. Some thoughts: - Plenty of filters in Instagram :) - Gif felt limiting/fragmented. Few platforms support Gifs (IG included), and the viewing experience changes platform to platform (Facebook vs. Imgur, etc). Videos, on the other hand, are universally supported with a pretty consistent viewing experience. Also, there are plenty of video-to-gif conversion apps 👍
Agnieszka
@telenardo @joshpuetz Seriously, you've built it as a hackathon project ;O? Thought it has been building from scratch for a weeks by a group of developers ;)
Tim Lenardo
@aga_jaskiewicz @joshpuetz Build a demo during a hackathon -> got the company excited about it -> staffed up the project -> spent a few weeks building a polished product.
Agnieszka
@telenardo @joshpuetz OK, now I got it ;)
Katrina Huang
@joshpuetz if you like boomerang, you should try RLY. It's a fairly new app that turns live photos or short videos into looping reels, so kind of like gifs. RLY is it's own social media platform, but the app makes it very easy to download your posts and share across other platforms. I've been using it for a bit and I love it so far!
Joel Patrick
1 second!? Seems... succinct. Will be interesting to see what people make.
Amanda Hill
Looks like IG is feeling pressure from giphy.
Shashwat Pradhan
Really like the Instagram side apps, @mikeyk wish Instagram had better developer relations/support people and a more powerful API.
Genuine Jack
Adios Phhhoto! we hardly knew ye
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