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Lee Edwards writes: "In the previous (Lite) version of Webshots, the pictures were individual files. They could be put into folders and the entire folder moved into the desktop picture portion of ...
Webshots, a photo publishing and sharing service which was acquired by CNET in August 2004, is starting to launch social networking features to compete ...
Ok, the CNET news we hinted at is starting to roll in. They've sold Webshots, a photo sharing site, for $45 million in cash to American Greetings. The ...
Webshots is becoming Smile. It also is sick of hosting your rager photos from 2001, brah, and come December they're going away.
If you’ve spent any time on the Internet back in the early 2000’s, you definitely ran into Webshots. It was the photo sharing service everyone used before Photobucket, before Flickr or Picasa ...
Webshots co-founders Andrew Laakmann, 32, Narendra Rocherolle, 33, and Nicholas Wilder, 29, reclaimed ownership of the service when U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Thomas Carlson approved the sale as part ...
Webshots is a sprawling, community-oriented photo- andvideo-sharing site that also makes prominent use of professionalstock photography. Webshots Desktop software lets you upload your own photos ...
Internet: Excite@Home sells photography site for $2.4 million after paying $82.5 million for it in 1999.
British developer Zonic on Friday released SwapTop 2.0, a revival of the product that the company introduced in 2001 to fill the gap left by the demise of Webshots, which provided desktop images ...
CNET Networks has done its first online divestment for a while: it has sold its once-high-flying online photo sharing site Webshots, to American Greetings for $45 million. Webshots is still among ...
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