Google reminds that you can always remove data location or disable Location History and Location permission from the camera.įinally, The Library tab is will you’ll see Albums, Trash, Archive, and Favorites. You can search for photos by pinching and zooming on a map or you can watch the map move as you scroll through your photos. This was Google’s most requested feature since Google Photos’ launch. In the search tab, you’ll find a new interactive map that’s helpful for finding memories. You’ll also be able to hide memories from certain people or time periods. There’s also a larger “Memories” carousel – which will not show you more kinds of memories, such as memories with your closest friends and family, memories from trips, and last week’s highlights. The Photos tab will now have larger thumbnails, less space between photos, and you’ll see auto-playing videos as well. There are three main tabs now instead of four: Photos, Search, and Library. The icon is still the colorful pinwheel, but it’s more circle-y and totally flattened, which we’ve seen Google do with many of its redesigned stock app icons. Google says more people are using Google Photos to see memories, after all, a there’s a stories-like feed that shows you what your week looked like in past years.Īnyway, there’s a new design coming to the UI, including a brand-new icon. The photo-keeping app is five years old and has gradually changed the way we keep and review memories over the years. Starting today, Google will begin rolling out a new update to its Google Photos app.
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This is a quick and easy read, and one I'd certainly return to any time I'm working on a story. McDonald's insights are simple yet profound, and their seeming obviousness is only clear in retrospect. "Invisible Ink" is a great corollary to that book, and dives into more specific and readily-applicable tools for creating compelling stories. It was helpful, but dealt with storytelling at the broadest level. I recently read Brian McDonald's "Golden Theme". The guy knows what he's talking about." -Paul Feig (creator of NBC's Freaks and Geeks, co-executive producer The Office) "With Invisible Ink Brian McDonald has written us a book to keep and heed forever because through the simple, graceful, graspable, original wisdom of it, we might just save our screenwriting lives." -Stewart Stern (Screenwriter of Rebel Without a Cause) Charles Johnson (National Book Award-winning author of Middle Passage) "If you want to write scripts, listen to Brian. I recommend this fine handbook on craft to any writer, apprentice or professional, working in any genre or form." -Dr. Ignore him at your peril." -Jim Taylor (Academy Award-winning screenwriter of Sideways and Election) ". Praise for Invisible ".If I manage to reach the summit of my next story it will be in no small part due to having read Invisible Ink." -Andrew Stanton (cowriter Toy Story, Toy Story 2, A Bug's Life, Monsters, Inc., and cowriter/director Finding Nemo and WALL-E) ".Brian McDonald uses his deep understanding of story and character to pass on essential truths about dramatic writing. You will learn techniques for building a compelling story around a theme, making your writing engage audiences, creating appealing characters, and much more. Invisible Ink lays out the essential elements of screenplay structure, using vivid examples from famous moments in popular movies as well as from one of his own popular scripts. But a successful screenplay needs Invisible Ink as well, the craft below the surface of words. When people think of a screenplay, they usually think about dialogue-the "visible ink" that is readily accessible to the listener, reader, or viewer. Brian McDonald, an award winning screenwriter who has taught his craft at several major studios, supplies writers with tools to make their work more effective and provides readers and audiences a deeper understanding of the storyteller's art. Acclaimed by successful screenwriters and authors, Invisible Ink is a helpful, accessible guide to the essential elements of the best storytelling. |
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