Vine App Coming Back
This is not a drill, and tweets about Vine coming back prove that the Internet is ready to make more videos. Yesterday, Vine co-founder Dom Hofmann tweeted a version of the Vine logo updated with.
Vine app coming back. For her part, Spencer suggested and is hopeful that Twitter will incorporate Vine into the app as a new tab. Given the way Vine has come back to life in some form on Twitter (and the fact that. Dom Hofmann was a co-founder of the millennial favorite video app before it got absorbed by Twitter and shuttered.. Vine coming back after defeating TikTok in the gulag.. I think it’s time. Unfortunately, however, as quick as the videos looped, the app was gone. Wipe your bored tears and let me whisper in your ear, there are rumors that Vine may be coming back . <p>Is Vine coming back? The founder of the six-second video app tweeted a cryptic message Wednesday implying a follow-up may be in the works.</p> By: Alex Hider
However, it looks like Vine might be coming back. It's true: There may be hope for Vine, according to a cryptic tweet from the app's co-founder, Dom Hofmann. On Tuesday, Dec. 6, Hofmann posted an. Byte is a long time coming. To rewind all the way, Hofmann co-founded Vine in June 2012 with Colin Kroll and Rus Yusupov, but it was acquired by Twitter before its launch in January 2013. The entertainment network where videos and personalities get really big, really fast. Download Vine to watch videos, remixes and trends before they blow up. In an announcement that can only be described as the Hail Mary of 2017, on Wednesday, Vine founder Dom Hofmann dropped a spicy hot nugget of news: Our dearly departed Vine app might be coming back.
With the fate of TikTok not entirely clear, people are wondering if this means Vine is coming back. Let’s rewind a bit. A couple days ago, the Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, went on Fox News and announced that the Trump administration is considering banning Chinese-owned apps because they believe the Chinese government is using apps like TikTok as a way to spy on U.S. citizens. Vine fans were left disappointed in 2017 when its owner, Twitter, pulled the plug on the video-looping app. But it's back in the news this week as one of its co-founders revealed that work on a. Vine (/ v aɪ n /) was an American social networking short-form video hosting service where users could share six or seven second-long, looping video clips.It was founded in June 2012; American microblogging website Twitter acquired it in October 2012, well before its official release on January 24, 2013. Videos published on Vine's social network could also be shared on different social. Dom Hofmann, the founder of Vine, is back with a new app, byte, that centers around “bringing back six-second looping videos.” The app’s tweet from January 24th also says that byte is.
Everyone Shut Up, Vine Might Be Coming Back And I'm Freaking The Fuck Out *SCREAMS EXTERNALLY FOR 6 SECONDS*. announced that he had plans to create a follow-up app. dom hofmann @dhof. Twitter's micro video app Vine died an untimely death — or, if you never used it, a totally logical and appropriate death — late last year, much to the chagrin of the dozen or so "Vine stars. Life is hell, but Vine is back. Today, Vine founder Dom Hofmann formally announced Byte, a new “video looping app“ set to launch in the spring of 2019. Hofmann’s been working on a Vine sequel since last November, but in May he said it was indefinitely delayed. Others took to Twitter to chime in on who "not to tell" about the new app, listing Internet celebrities who rose to fame through the original Vine. Hofmann is the latest Vine co-founder to make.