Let me first explain that I am a huge fan of Flickr (I have over 7,000 photos on the service), but since I heard Thomas Hawk is joining Zooomr I have decided to give it a try. Brian was visiting Mike Arrington when Kristopher Tate was showing off his new photo site called Zooomr. Brian was knocked out! Mike wrote about it in a post titled, “Flickr on Steroids.“ But I was unconvinced, I never bothered to set up an account because Flickr isn’t broken for me - it is great!
That all changed when I saw Brian’s post that Thomas Hawk (one of my favorite photographers on Flickr) is joining the Zooomer team. Holy Bat-pictures! Why is he joining Zooomr? Is Zooomr important? Isn’t it just a Flickr clone? Hm… I better find out more. Usually, once I settle on a platform there is a huge amount of inertia keeping as a user. Unless something is broken or there is a huge advantage to switching I will stick it out. I still haven’t set up a Zooomr account, but my interest has been piqued by Thomas Hawk’s action.
I am sure I am not alone in my surprise. Isn’t it interesting how a single, influential person like Thomas Hawk can make a business relevant?

Thomas Hawk, flickrmaven to the max, is going to work for Zooomr. I got a demo of Zooomr from 17 year old phenom Kris earlier this year. I’m at the beach, so I don’t have time to fully grok Hawk’s move, but you check it out and explain it to me when I come in from the sun.
Postscript: I also see that my pals Chris & Tara are hating on a TechCrunch post, which also has some back & forth from the genius Stewart B. as well. Folks, in the words of the man, Can’t we all just get along? It’s photosharing, not the Gaza Strip.