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Stewart Butterfield: The Visionary Behind Flickr and Slack’s Success

Stewart Butterfield: The Visionary Behind Flickr and Slack’s Success

Stewart Butterfield, born in 1973 in the small town of Lund, British Columbia, is a prominent figure in the tech industry. From a young age, Butterfield displayed a curiosity for technology, driven by his fascination with computers. He pursued his passion by studying philosophy at the University of Victoria, later earning a master’s degree in the same field from the University of Cambridge. Though his academic background was rooted in the humanities, Butterfield’s career trajectory was anything but traditional.

The Birth of Flickr

Stewart Butterfield: The Visionary Behind Flickr and Slack’s Success

Image Source: britannica.com

Butterfield’s first major breakthrough came in 2004 with the creation of Flickr, an online photo-sharing platform. Along with his then-wife, Caterina Fake, Butterfield initially set out to create an online game called “Game Neverending.” However, the game never took off, but they recognized the potential of a photo-sharing feature within the game. This realization led to the development of Flickr. The platform revolutionized how people shared and organized photos online, introducing features such as tagging and social networking aspects that were novel at the time. Flickr quickly gained traction, catching the attention of tech giants.

In 2005, Yahoo acquired Flickr for approximately $25 million. The acquisition was a significant milestone in Butterfield’s career, as it not only brought financial success but also cemented his reputation as an innovative tech entrepreneur. However, despite Flickr’s success, Butterfield’s ambitions extended beyond the photo-sharing domain.

The Pivot to Slack

After his time at Yahoo, Butterfield embarked on a new venture that would again start as a game but evolve into something much larger. In 2009, he co-founded Tiny Speck, a company focused on developing the online game “Glitch.” Like his previous attempt, the game didn’t achieve the desired success. However, Butterfield and his team realized that the internal communication tool they had built for their work on Glitch was far more valuable.

This tool became the foundation for what we now know as Slack. Launched in 2013, Slack transformed workplace communication by offering an organized, intuitive, and user-friendly platform for teams to collaborate. The service quickly gained a massive user base, becoming one of the fastest-growing business applications in history. By 2019, Slack had gone public, solidifying its place as a cornerstone of modern workplace communication.

Legacy and Impact

Stewart Butterfield’s journey from Flickr to Slack is a testament to his ability to pivot, adapt, and innovate. His career highlights the importance of recognizing opportunities, even when they arise from apparent failures. Through his ventures, Butterfield has left a lasting impact on the tech world, revolutionizing how we interact online, both socially and professionally.

Flickr Plans to Soon Dump its a Decade Old Yahoo Login System

The photo-sharing website Flickr has announced that it no more will have the same old Yahoo’s login system. After a long decade, the company has finally decided on dumping the tedious feature that none of its users is interested in using.

flickr
Image Source: siliconindia.com

In 2007, Yahoo had acquired Flickr, and only after two years of the acquisition, the company installed a Yahoo login for Flickr. In the pre-Instagram era, Flickr was at the top of the all photo sharing websites, but the users always complained about the Yahoo login system, as nobody used their Yahoo mail Id otherwise and often used to forget the passwords.

In April 2018,
SmugMug acquired Flickr, and since then it has been working on the
new login system for the Flickr users. Even due to the massive data
breach it faced, which affected its three billion users, badly,
Flickr was receiving the requests for a new and secure login system.

As of now, Flickr
might not be as influential as it used to be, but still, there are
many loyal Flickr users that are continuously posting and sharing
pictures on the platform. So the new login system is the biggest news
for them, and the platform can expect more user engagement in the
future.

Also, Flickr has
extended the dates for its free account users to download the
pictures, now rescheduled to March 12 from Feb 5. Last year, the
company had announced new plans for the users, in which the users
with premium accounts would pay a $50 as the monthly charge, and the
ones with free accounts will only be able to download 1000
photographs from the platform.

“We hope you love this new, simpler login experience,” Flickr said in a statement. “We’re still hard at work on performance and stability improvements across the site, but we’re delighted to check this key item off our members’ wish lists.”

The new login system is still under the process until then the users need to use the same Yahoo account for Flickr. But as soon the new login system comes into effect the users will have to register themselves with a new account and password on Flickr.

Caterina Fake : One of the Most Influential Women in Silicon Valley

In the past more than 15 years, Flickr has been the best Photo and Video hosting platform across the world. It allows you to share and host your pictures online, becoming the most favourite photo sharing website among all. At a time there was nothing like Flickr and then the idea of creating it hit two cleaver minds; Caterina Fake and her ex-husband Stewart Butterfield. Caterina is among the Time’s Magazine’s 2006’s list of 100 Most Influential People and was awarded the Silicon Valley Forum’s Visionary Award (2018).

Early Life

Caterina Fake was born on 13 June 1969, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. As a child, she had a keen interest in poetry and classical music and was not allowed to watch TV. She became familiar with computers and the internet through her friends.

She went to Choate Rosemary Hall to pursue her high school and attended Vassar College to do her B.A. In English. Meanwhile, she was also an alumnus at Smith College.

Career

Even being an Arts student, her interest in computers and programming, led her to grab a job as the lead designer at one of the first web development companies, named as Organic Online. She worked on the first online ventures of many famous companies including McDonald’s, Nike, Levi’s, etc.

Caterina fake
Image Source: wikimedia.org

Caterina also operated as a research staff member of ‘Interval Research and in 1990, served as the Art Director at Salon.com, where she played a key role in creating an online community, social software, etc. In 1997, Caterina started working at Netscape, managing its community forum.

Founding Flickr and Rise as an Entrepreneur

In 2002, Caterina, along with Stewart Butterfield and Jason Classon, founded a company and, named it Ludicrop. Together, they created a Game Neverending, that they somehow, could not launch. Later, she started working on a new project named as Flickr with Stewart and, launched it on 10 February 2004. Soon after its launch, it became a hit and Yahoo acquired it in 2005 along with Ludicorp, paying an amount of $25 million. Later, Yahoo! added more features to Flickr, like social media integration, community open APIs, tagging, etc to enhance its functionality. In the same year, Caterina also joined Yahoo! as the head of a Technology Development group, Hack Yahoo! along with Brickhouse.

After leaving the job at Yahoo, on 13 June 2008, Caterina started working on a new project named as Hunch, which she co-founded with an entrepreneur Chris Dixon, in June 2009. The website was acquired by eBay in 2011 paying $80 million. In 2012, Fake launched a website named Pinwheel later renamed to Findery, which is her latest venture.

Caterina won Business Week’s Best Leader of 2005, followed by Forbes 2005 eGang and Red Herring’s 20 Entrepreneurs under 35 awards (2005). In 2006, she appeared on the cover of Newsweek magazine. She has also received two Doctorate degrees (Honors), one from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2009 and another from The New School 2013.

Caterina was a member of the board of directors of Creative Commons and for a time period, also invested in and chaired the Board of Etsy.

Personal Life

Caterina Fake was married to Stewart Butterfield the co-founder of Flickr and her business partner, for 7 years (2001-2007) and the two have a daughter together. Currently, she is living in San Fransisco, with her boyfriend Jaiku the co-founder of Jyri Engeström and their three children.