You can experiment with Vine, holding and lifting your finger to film as many times as you want up to a total of six seconds. It’s kind of a neat way to show a fast timelapse video through lots of short film spurts. Looking through some of the popular vines can give you great ideas for making more vines more interesting.
Exploring and Interacting on Vine
Since it’s still quite new, Vine lacks a lot of features that other apps have, but still offers the basics to make it a mobile social network. There’s an Explore tab, which displays a search bar for you to find vines with specific tags or keywords. You can browse through the “Editor’s Picks” and the “Popular Now” section to help you quickly find some of the best vines, or you can tap any of the icons below with some of the featured tags.
The Activity tab shows who follows you, who comments on your vines, and who presses the smiley face “like” button on any of them. Every vine has an option for you to like and leave comments, almost identical to Instagram.
Is It Worth Using?
There are a million other social networks out there. Not all are worth your time. There are, unfortunately, quite a few downsides to using Vine. Vine can’t access your Facebook friends, so it can’t automatically connect you to those in your Facebook network who are already on Vine.
There’s also no way to take video from your camera roll and upload it at a later time to Vine. Vine webpages don’t have an social sharing buttons, and there’s no way to share directly to other popular social networks — like Tumblr.
The features and functionality that it lacks will probably be worked into the app sometime in the future, and we’ll update this article when that happens. If you’re on Twitter, Vine is a really neat tool to use, because Vine’s Twitter card integration make it look like an animated image or GIF right in your Twitter stream.
Finally, I’d like to give credit to statista.com for the chart I included in this blog: http://www.statista.com/