This makes Posterous, among other things, an improved front end to its own main competitor.
FORBES: Pick one: Autoposting is the end/salvation of blogging
There are many good alternatives to Posterous vying for the attention of the newly homeless bloggers.
The Y Combinator-backed company is still keeping the ability to use Posterous as a public blogging platform.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Posterous Spaces is designed to help people easily privately share photos and videos with friends or family.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr and other services, and now Posterous too, are interconnected and intertwined to varying degrees.
FORBES: Pick one: Autoposting is the end/salvation of blogging
The feature that will make Posterous Spaces easy to connect with non-technical friends or family members is email.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
If you can wait a bit, two Posterous co-founders are working on a new project called Posthaven.
From there, Posterous automatically creates an account, and a user can update his or her blog easily from anywhere.
What sets Posterous apart from traditional blogging platforms like WordPress is its simplicity.
The answer: PicPosterous, one of the most recent developments from blog platform Posterous.
Google would not be interested in it as it already owns a blogging service and Twitter already acquired Posterous.
She posts something on Posterous once and the service distributes to all of the social community sites where she participates.
Forbes reader Rich Pearson from Posterous submitted company founders Garry Tan and Sachin Agarwal as Names To Know in 2011.
And it provides a dead-simple way for content published on a Posterous blog to be autoposted, or mirrored, to other services.
FORBES: Pick one: Autoposting is the end/salvation of blogging
You can build an online CV for free through Posterous.com or WordPress.
Start-up Posterous, best known for its simple blogging service via email, has revamped the company around a new product called Posterous Spaces.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Posterous has gotten popular with media over-sharers, people who want to create a breadcrumb trail of photos or videos their fans can follow.
Sadly, the consensus of tech experts is that Posterous may now flatline, because most of the company's employees will switch to working on projects for Twitter.
Posterous is the new kid on the blogging block, a Y Combinator-funded startup from two guys named Sachin Agarwal and Garry Tan.
FORBES: Pick one: Autoposting is the end/salvation of blogging
Since Agarwal and Tan created Posterous last year, traffic to the site has increased tenfold to over 700, 000 unique visitors per month last month.
When a Posterous user shares photos with family members who are not registered on Posterous, those family members will still receive the photos via email.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
You get an e-mail address from Posterous that you use to send attachments, text or Web clippings and up it goes on your Posterous blog.
But the Spaces product seems to place Posterous more in the realm of private photo sharing app Path, founded by former Facebook executive Dave Morin.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Posterous will try to carve out a space for people who do not want to share on Facebook and would prefer a more simple private option.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Unlike photo apps such as the popular Instagram app, with Posterous you can post multiple photos in one post, and you can create private groups.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
The move makes Posterous less in competition with blogging platforms such as Tumblr and more of a private photo sharing service along the lines of Path.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Posterous's main claim to fame among travellers has been its streamlined way of keeping images and text private, optionally limiting access to friends and family who Posterous users authorise.
The service is designed to be simple to use, with clear designations of what is private and what is public, says Sachin Agarwal, founder and CEO of Posterous.
FORBES: Posterous Is Now 'Spaces,' A Photo-Focused App For Private Sharing
Posterous has added features lately that let you create a more traditional Web site experience, features such as the ability to create pages behind your main page (About Me).
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