Sarah is a freelance writer and CNET How To blogger. Her main focus is Windows, but she also covers everything from mobile tech to video games to DIY hardware projects. She likes to press buttons and ...
From 2012 through 2016, Vine was one of the hottest social media platforms under the sun, hosting more than 40 million short videos from more than 200 million users before Twitter decided to ...
KNOXVILLE (WATE) – Vine is dead. Twitter announced Thursday that they are discontinuing the app. They said users will still be able to access and download their Vine videos. “We’ll be keeping the ...
Short-form video creators everywhere were dumbstruck at the end of October when Twitter announced it was killing Vine. There’s still no word on when Vine might see its final day, and there are rumors ...
Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey is backing a project to reboot the nostalgic six-second looping videos of Vine through a new project called diVine. This provides access to over 10,000 archived Vine ...
Vine’s six-second videos are making a comeback with the launch of a new app, diVine, backed by former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and featuring more than 100,000 restored clips. According to TechCrunch, ...
The company made the surprise announcement in a blog post today. Vine launched in 2013 with a new concept for videos that enabled it to become an instant hit. Vine clips are only six seconds in length ...
For a moment back there, Vine was the most fun place on the internet. The video sharing platform, which allowed looping videos of up to 6 seconds, was a haven for absurd humour, in a time before ...
I don’t care about Vine. Everything I’ve seen so far is soporific or sophomoric, boring beyond redemption or a big steamy pile of jerky blurriness. And then—then this happened: these LEGO VINES by ...