A collection of essays exploring the future of blogging for business. Edited by Stephen Waddington.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Video
Free Software
- Windows Live Movie Maker – if you have a PC this software is free and can be downloaded from the Windows Live website. It is fairly easy to use and a series of video tutorials showing you how to use it can be found here on the Vimeo website. This series of tutorials covers everything you need to know to make your own video ready to upload to YouTube or Vimeo .
- iMovie – Apple Macs come with the IMovie software installed and you’ll find everything you need to know about how to use it in this series of video tutorials, also from the Vimeo website.
- Jing – free software that allows you to “create images and videos of what you see on your computer screen and share them instantly.”
- You might also want to take a look at the free trial software that’s available from a number of companies. Adobe will give you a one month free trial of their Photoshop image editing and Premiere Pro video editing software for example and Camtasia is also available for a trial period.
Online Video Editing
There are a number of sites that allow you to edit a video online. Here are three of them. With these sites you don’t need to download software, you upload your videos, still pictures and music to the website and perform the editing online before downloading a completed video.
Correlation
Geek humour from xkcd – a webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math and language.
Blocking Ads
As a confirmed grumpy old git I get unreasonably annoyed by web sites which are loaded up with large numbers of flashy adverts. And I’m not the only one – this post has been inspired by a friend who has recently been getting annoyed at Facebook. He knows that Facebook serves up customised adverts based on users’ activities and cannot understand why they seem to have decided that he should be served up a stream of adverts for male incontinence pads. You can add your own jokes – I’ve done them all already.
To save myself from this sort of minor annoyance I use the Adblock Plus extension for Firefox, When enabled this extension blocks all sorts of obtrusive adverts, including those on Facebook and YouTube, and has other features to protect my privacy.
To show you how how Adblock Plus works I’ll use the Spice Up Your Blog web-site as an example. This blog occasionally has some useful information for people using WordPress blogs, so I follow its RSS feed on Google Reader. But I find the large numbers of adverts on the site rather annoying and to make things worse some of them are animated. Here’s a screenshot of the site this morning – taken while I was not using AdBlock Plus.
When I enable AdBlock Plus on Firefox all the annoying ads go away and it looks like this – much better.
Meanwhile Facebook seems to have decided that I’m several stones overweight and that need to buy a new house.
But with the plugin enabled (the normal state of my browser) I don’t need to know this.
Adblock Plus is is also available for Internet Explorer and Chrome and I there’s a similar plugin for Safari on Macs.
There’s some controversy around the use of advert blocking as many websites are reliant on advertising for revenue. Well most of the community behind Adblock are quite happy with what they term “acceptable”, “plain and unobtrusive” adverts and the extension’s default settings allows adverts meeting guidelines that I personally consider quite acceptable – so I leave the extension configured to “allow some non-obtrusive advertising”.
According to the text on the screen where you enable or disable this option “The goal is to support websites using non-intrusive ways to advertise and to encourage more websites to do the same”. That will do for me.
Adblock Plus is an open community project.
RSS in Plain English
Screenshot
Screenshot of an entire web page taken using the FireShot plugin for Firefox.
Student Video
My favourite video from last year’s students. It’s not the most professional production I’ve ever seen but it’s very creative and gets the point across well.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyMKHEoYx_8&feature=player_embedded
Leading Questions
How leading questions can be used to manipulate survey results. A scene from the BBC series Yes Minister