Today, Facebook revealed a slew of new features and controls for your profile—including the ability to use a looping video as your photo. Which is... almost like a GIF! The evolution of the Facebook ...
Facebook will soon let you animate your profile photo. The social network announced Wednesday that it’s testing three new features on its iOS mobile app. One of them allows users to use 7-second ...
Facebook just launched a slew of new profile features, including the ability to make your profile picture a GIF or set temporary profile pictures that will change after a specified amount of time. The ...
Changes are coming to Facebook. No, you won’t be paying for the service, but you will be able to change your static profile photo to a “short, looping video,” which Facebook is calling a “profile ...
There is no automated way to add animated profile picture on Gmail. You’d first need to create the GIF by using online tools like remove.bg and Canva, and then upload that GIF as your profile picture ...
Facebook has rolled out its new mobile profile options for some lucky users, and if you're among them, it means you have access to the new GIF-like profile pictures. You won't know you have the new ...
While other social networks seem to be ignoring the resurgence of the popular GIF animated image format, Google+ seems to be embracing it wholeheartedly. On Monday, Google’s social network gave users ...
X appears to be considering letting users add animated GIFs to their profile pictures. Andrea Conway, a designer for the site formerly known as Twitter, tweeted a poll this week on the idea. As of ...
Facebook is spicing up profile photos in a big way. Facebook users will now be able to record a short looping video, a bit like a Vine or a GIF, to use as their profile photo on mobile, the company ...
A quick search will show endless Facebook users seeking out ways to use animated GIFs as their profile picture, and while that social network still doesn't allow it, Google+ has stepped forward to ...
A designer for X (formerly Twitter) polled users about adding animated GIFs for profile pics. Twitter banned GIF profiles in 2013, but old ones were allowed to keep them — including me. One person who ...