Saturday, April 13, 2013 - 12:53
The latest social media craze for smartphones is the Vine App.
There was once a time when really short shorts meant this.
Today, it means this.
The video-sharing app Vine was launches just in January by Twitter.
Yes, the same company that made communicating 140 character at a time the norm.
Vine fuels creativity by limiting the length of video clips to just six seconds.
Those videos are then posted on an endless loop to your twitter account.
Since its debut, Vine has become a go-to service for not just avid tweeters but advertisers... and celebrities.
This woman created what may be the world's first Vine resume.
And it landed her a job.
Actor Adam Goldberg came to be known as "the king of Vine".
Thanks to his soap series, where he pieces together one man's unraveling life.
Six seconds at a time. Vine's even made a teaser out of teasers.
Check out this six second trailer for the movie "Wolverine". The concept can seem a little tricky. So we decided to help out all you "Vino-Saurs" still stuck in the social media
Ice Age by getting a lesson from this guy. Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey showed me first-hand just how easy it is to point and click my way into generation "V".
Before long, I was a lean, mean, video sharing machine. The app has become so entrenched in pop culture, the tribeca film festival is even letting Vine Vets Vie for their
shot at six seconds of glory.... With a competition for the best Vine video.
Here's one contender's take on the film classic "Citizen Kane". The beauty of Vine is that you don't need to be a trained photographer or techie to create a mini-masterpiece.
There are no filters, no editing or ways to add audio. In fact, the biggest obstacle on Vine is time.
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