Tuesday 29 July 2014

Instagram Bolt is very real, but its availability is limited (for now)

Instagram Bolt is very real, but its availability is limited (for now)

It seemed inevitable that Instagram would eventually launch its own Snapchat competitor, and today the company proved the rumors true with the announcement of Instagram Bolt.


The new iOS and Android app lets users send photos and videos to their friends with a single tap.


Much like in Snapchat and other apps like Taptalk and Facebook Slingshot, the content then disappears as soon as it's viewed.


There's just one problem if you want to get your hands on Instagram Bolt right now: it's only available in three countries.


Promises


Instagram Bolt has launched in New Zealand, Singapore and South Africa, and an Instagram spokesperson told TechRadar that the company expects to release it elsewhere "soon."


"We decided to start small with Bolt, in just a handful of countries, to make sure we can scale while maintaining a great experience," the spokesperson said.


In addition The Verge received a statement noting that 65% of Instagram users live outside the US, "so an international launch, while different, is actually not all that out of order with what we do."


"This isn't a side project," that spokesperson promised. "We are totally behind this thing."


How it works


The Bolt app appeared first in a banner ad inside the Instagram app for Android on July 24.


Using the app is dead simple: tap on a friend's face to open the camera and shoot and send them a photo, or long-tap to send a video. You can add overlay text, or reply to content you've received. Content disappears once it's viewed and swiped away.


Despite Instagram being owned by Facebook, Bolt will only import friends from your phone contacts, not from your Facebook friends.


And users can set up to four favorites that will stay on the app's main page, though Bolt only lets users send content to one friend at a time.


It's a pretty app, but time will tell whether Instagram Bolt has what it needs to compete with the glut of other quick-and-dirty photo messaging apps popping up.

















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