LONDON -- Remember hearing about the online motoring community that The MotherGrand Tourand Top Gear's Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May were planning earlier this year?
Well, it's finally here.
SEE ALSO: Twitter has spoken and it gives 'The Grand Tour' a glowing reviewDRIVETRIBE, a sort of website/app/social media platform hybrid, went live on Monday.
The basic idea is that you sign in through Facebook and start by joining six "Tribes" -("Hammond's Foby Jockeys," and "Dogs in cars," for instance) which then gives you access to a range of different content. You then interact with the program by commenting, reposting or "bumping" (the Drivetribe version of a favourite or an upvote).
The site's still very new, but after a 30-minute tour it looks like fun.
The fact that you have followers and the option to "bump" posts gives the site the same mildly competitive element found on Reddit and Twitter. And there's a decent mishmash of stuff to appeal to a range of people (the more hardcore car channels are counter-balanced with a healthy dose of memes and dog photos).
“The internet is brilliant," Clarkson said in a press release sent to Mashable. "You can watch Pandas sneezing and find out when it’s high water in the Easter Islands.
"But until DRIVETRIBE came along, there’s never been a one- stop-shop for people who like cars.”
Topics Social Media
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Veteran raises money to send Trump to a war zone so he can earn an actual Purple Heart
Walmart buys Jet.com for $3 billion to take on Amazon
Every MCU movie villain ranked, from "Iron Man" to "Thunderbolts*"
Rockstar Games, crunch, and the great shame of the video games biz
Sex ed is missing something key for kids who've endured sexual trauma
The State of PC Gaming in 2016
Why the 'Hill House' finale changes the way we look at the show
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。