Jason Kincaid is currently working as a writer at TechCrunch. He grew up in Danville, California and later moved to Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, where he studied biology with a minor in "society and genetics". You can contact him at jkincaidtc@gmail.com (it has other addresses too, so don't worry if you have another). ? Read More

The most popular photo sharing website is getting another update.
In the blog post tonight, Facebook — which is by far the largest site of photos from the Internet — has announced that it is releasing a new photo viewer that represents the image is 960 pixels wide, as opposed to 720 pixels they were from March 2010 (they were 620 pixels before that). The viewer himself is also getting an update that replaces the current black Lightbox opaque white, which he says puts more emphasis on the photo itself. Facebook also said that photography now load twice as fast, although he doesn't get in the way he is serving content so much faster.
Facebook photos in a large update was released in September 2010, when he introduced the black based Lightbox photo viewer and added support for pictures bigger than 2048 pixels wide (it is not actually displayed in the Viewer, but you can download them at this size). This update finally made Facebook a viable way to share photos of high quality (previously you could only upload a low-resolution version).
It was a great week on Facebook. On Tuesday it announced a number of settings, mostly related to its privacy controls and photo tagging, you will soon be able to approve the photos before they show up in your profile that users ask for years. This also drastically changed the way Facebook jobs, less emphasis on checkins. Today confirmed that it is killing off its daily deals, Groupon as only four months after the start, while location-based transactions is still around.
Facebook is the largest social network, with more than 500 million users. Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook in February 2004, originally as an exclusive network for students at Harvard University. She ...

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