Instagram thinks tall photos are a good way to go after TikTok

In recent times, social networks have sought toreplicate the success formula of TikTok. Those efforts led to the introduction ofReelson Instagram andShortson YouTube. But Meta’s visual-first platform in particular wanted to take things several steps further than just stimulating the creation of quick, looping videos. The company infamously started testing a TikTok-like UI with posts spanning the full screen and algorithmic recommendations of videos which was met withintense backlash from users. The company decided to roll back the changes, but it looks like Instagram is not quite ready to roll back on its vertical dreams just yet, though: this time.

Currently, if you want to upload a tall image (you’ve probably taken your fair share of portrait photos), you only have the option to do so on the app’s Stories feature. If you try to upload one as a post, you’ll find that the app will crop it for you to fit an 8:10 aspect ratio. Now, it looks like Instagram is ready to let people upload images taller than that. In Adam Mosseri’s weekly Q&A (viaEngadget), the head of Instagram confirmed the app would test photo posts as tall as 9:16.

4

The simple reasoning behind the test is that you could currently upload tall videos to Instagram (either as normal posts, IGTV posts, or Reels), but not photos, and that they need to be treated equally. But it might also signal that Instagram is not completely done with its dream of becoming TikTok just yet.

9:16 photos would play better with the infamous full-screen interface Instagram tested recently. The company did walk back the test, but the dev team might still be looking for ways to rework that layout — maybe taking user criticism in mind — rather than scrapping it completely.

nexus2cee_InstagramHero_thumb.png

The test should roll out over the weeks to a certain number of users before the feature either gets rolled out widely or scrapped completely.

The note-taking app I should have used all along

Browsers

Broader branding hints at wider paid-tier ambitions

No more excuses

Samsung Notes logo in front of image containing S Pen and devices using Samsung Notes

New data from Circana affirmed that Nintendo Switch 2 is still a resounding success in the United States, having now sold 2 million units

$135 is its lowest price in months

Google Home icon with some gadgets around it.

It’s been an interesting journey