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Archive for the 'Photo' Category

Slideshare

Strangely enough, not everyone is comfortable talking on camera, or even holding a camera and pointing it at other things and talking, or even just pointing the camera at other things and not talking.  After years of laughing at Americas Funniest Videos, perhaps I had this unrealistic expectation that everyone likes to be videoed, and in particular people like to be videoed making an idiot out of themselves.  YouTube has backed up that myth, by the way.  Turns out that most people are camera shy, especially in libraryland, so finding people to talk on camera can be difficult.

image courtesy of flickr user peoplearestrange

image courtesy of flickr user peoplearestrange

Here’s some excuses:

  • I hate the way I look on camera
  • I’m in the witness protection program
  • My voice sounds funny
  • The camera adds ten pounds
  • Why would anyone care what I have to say?
  • Never in a million years, period.

If you’re one of these people, and everyone you work with is also one of these people, but for some reason you still want to make a video, or perhaps you’ve been delivered a mandate to make a video, then Slideshare might offer the alternative you’re looking for.  Most movie editors will allow you to use photos instead of video clips - take a series of photos, plug them into the movie maker, add a soundtrack of either music or narration (or both, if your movie maker allows two different soundtracks), adjust the amount of time each photo shows, add transitions, if you want (fade from one to the next, etc.), and voila you have yourself a movie.

Here’s something I’ve run into, though - when I tried doing this in the basic Windows Movie Maker, it crashed on me.  Repeatedly.  I’m pretty sure it had to do with the size of the photo files, but it might be that it just didn’t like me, and has a vendetta against me.  Sometimes it crashes when I try to make a video with too many clips, too.  When that happened, did i spend money on a better editor?  No!  I turned to another free solution, Slideshare!

Slideshare allows you to upload ppt slideshows to share with others.  You can leave it a slideshow if you want, or you can add an mp3 to it and make it a “slidecast.”  You can sync the slides to go with the music/narration - so that the slides change at appropriate moments in your narration.

Here’s one I made:  http://www.slideshare.net/crashsolo/car-repair-for-fvrl-members-presentation

I can see several good ways to use slideshare in libraryland:

  • Presentations - if you deliver a presentation at a conference, a meeting, or wherever, you can post the slides to slideshare, and give people a link to go view them.  Slides by themselves don’t tell the story of the presentation, however, so you can record a version of you talk and synch it to the slides, creating a multimedia document of your presentation that others can view later.
  • Tutorials - screenshots and photos can go a long way in instruction, and a voice over can finish it up.  I’ll admit my initial attempt at a car repair tutorial is pretty rough, but it was more for pitching the idea than for actual implementation.
  • Events -  Staff, teens, etc. could collect photos, put them in an interesting order, add a musical soundtrack, and voila, you’ve got something interesting to watch that promotes library programs.  It might not have the splash of animoto, but it can be easier to control when the pictures appear, and when text appears, and for how long, etc.

One of the things I’ve struggled with with slideshare is that I can’t upload it to YouTube - something that would make it easier for me to work with.  However, it does have embed code so you can put it on a website or blog.  If my library were to make use of slideshare things like my car repair piece, we would just take the code and embed it where we thought it should go.

There are other slidecast/slideshow sharing sites out there, and I think the most recent version of powerpoint (the one I don’t yet have) allows you to turn your slideshow into a movie with sound.

Some other slideshow sites:


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LIFE photo archive - Google scores again!

It’s been out for a month already and I’m slightly embarrassed to have just heard about it. Google is hosting an image archive for LIFE magazine, not just the amazing published photos, but also the millions of archived photos that nearly no one has before seen. In November about 20 percent of the photos had been scanned and Google expects to finish the project in just a few months. I really enjoy this photo of Governor William Stratton playing with his great dane.gov. stratton w great dane

You can go to the link above or include source:life in your Google Image search to limit to that collection. This collection goes back as far as the 1860s and can be browsed by decade, or by a short list of popular topics arranged by broad category (people, events, etc.).

I wonder what other large image collections will become available to the public? Earlier this year the Library of Congress released a photo archive on Flickr. This seems to be a pretty new thing for Google, they’ve indexed online images for years, but hosting as well? That’s news to me. Unlike other images found in the Google Image search, these images contain a limited amount of metadata, tags (they call them labels), related images, as well as a custom page template.

If you find a photograph you cannot live without, there seems to be a link on most photos to order a framed print from LIFE magazine using Qoop, an online photo, book, and other media production and sales site. Otherwise, you can use the photos for personal non-commercial use, though the larger versions have a LIFE watermark in the lower-right corner.


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iPhone/iTouch Mania! - Bring on the free apps!

This week I want to showcase some of my favorite apps for the iPhone/iTouch. All but one of them are free, I really don’t like having to pay for apps unless they are super special so have only made a few exceptions so far (2 games and 1 noted below).

Twitterific - Microblogging at its finest. It’s easy to set up Twitter to post your tweets via text message, but why waste a text message when you already have a data plan? Install Twitterific and post your tweets for free, plus view your feed from your friends!

Facebook -Keep up with your Facebook social goings-on, a major update was recently released so this mobile version uses a lot of functionality of the “new” Facebook. Very intuitive so far.

IM+ - Instant messaging on the iPhone is a mixed bag. Unlike other smartphones and the like, the iPhone only runs one application at a time along with system functions (phone, text messages, calendar, alarm, etc.) that will run in the background. This means that if you download AIM, Google Chat, Yahoo Chat, etc. you will only be able to use one at a time. Lame! So far, IM+ is the only free IM software to handle multiple account logins at the same time. My only gripe isn’t against IM+ but against the iPhone in general, because the app closes and your connections go offline when the device goes into sleep mode, you go back to the home screen, or open another application.

Klick - The iPhone has a decent camera (don’t throw out your cybershot, folks!) but there is not a built-in app to share these photos with online services such as Flickr. Why should I have to download the photos to my computer and then upload to Flickr when this phone supposedly has this great data connectivity? Enter Klick. Other similar apps are not free or require you take the photo from within their program originally, NOT using the iPhone “Camera” application which leaves you with photos in two locations. Klick can access the native photo directory directly and very easily upload to Flickr. I love this app!

iWant - I used this app to its purpose just last weekend. I was in an unfamiliar part of town with a friend and went to a concert. After the concert we thought it’d be fun to grab a beer in the area at a local bar or pub and chat about the concert. Then we realized that we would have to just start driving around and hope for the best when I remembered iWant. I opened the app, chose the category for bar/pub/tavern and had it show me businesses within 1 mile of my current location. Ta-da! 3 establishments popped up complete with ratings and reviews. We were very happy with our choice, C-Bar, for those of you who live in the Portland, Oregon area.

MySpace - Like Facebook, a iPhone version of the popular social networking site. Many functions are available in this tidy little app, I’ve found it’s actually faster to check my messages here than going to MySpace on my computer!

Pandora - Most of you are probably familiar with this Internet radio site. This freebie app connects you to the exact same site and services. You must have a Pandora account, but the neato thing is that it uses your preferences/lists/etc. from your regular web account, so aside from signing in, there is no tedious setup.

AirSharing - With the exception of music, video, and applications, the iDevices really do not provide a nice way to transport other files on that 8- or 16-GB hard drive. I finally came across this great application, AirSharing which essentially sets up your iDevice as a network drive that you can drag/drop files to/from. Easy to set up and simple to use! Now you can drag around those necessary PDFs, DOCs, XLSs, PPTs, etc. - $6.99 and well worth it.


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Digital Scrapbooks - a tool for learning?

Last month we were at the county fair where along with the fair food, we enjoyed seeing the livestock, the old tractors, a 1, 0000 pound pumpkin and the entries in the Arts and Crafts Building.  Next to the woodworking, the quilts, and the counted cross stitch were displays of scrapbook pages in different categories.   I can appreciate how scrapbook crafters build a narrative around their photographs using design, layout,  color, papers and memorabilia.

Now that most photos are born digital and web applications make it easy, scrapbooking has moved to the web.   A few weeks ago, an English professor was here in the library talking about how she was going to use “scrapblogging” in her course.  I have never really connected scrapbooking with learning, but apparently I’ve been missing a trend in education. One teacher calls scrapbooking “personalizing the curriculum.”

Scrapblog is a “free web-based service for creating and sharing digital scrapbooks.” It’s been around since 2007 and has an easy to use drag and drop interface where users can build scrapbooks based on existing themes or by starting with a blank page.  Users can integrate photos and videos from their hard drive or from online sharing sites like Flickr or Picasa.  The final product can be stored and shared on Scrapblog, or shared to social network sites.   This year, Photobucket partnered with Scrapblog to make scrapblogging available from within Photobucket.  Scrapblog recently added a service where users can pay to have their scrapbooks printed as books, postcards, greeting cards, etc.

I found the integration of Photobucket and Scrapblog to be a little clunky.. I wanted to save my scrapblog to edit later, but found that my edits were not really accepted. I had better luck working directly with an account in Scrapblog.  Please don’t grade me on my results.

http://www.scrapblog.com/viewer/viewer.aspx?sbid=652687


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postcard.fm: email your audio card

Here’s a fun way to send greetings. I found POSTCARD.FM over at Emily Chang and thought it was worth sharing. The gist is: create your own audio postcard and email it to your recipient. All you have to do is fill in the blanks by finding a photo and a song on your computer. Then, enter your friend’s email. After the files upload, enter your email, a note to your friend and send it off. Your friend receives a cute card.
postcardIt’s super easy-as long as you have an mp3. My mac didn’t like the mp3 format so I switched to a pc to create my card. As of this post I haven’t received my card yet so I can’t post it yet. In the meantime, hop on over and send someone a card!


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Yahoo! I finally made a yahoo pipe!

I was super excited when I first found out about Yahoo! Pipes. I wanted to remix content on the web and build  custom feeds for different audiences.  But then I tried to use Pipes and my hopes were dashed. My initial attempts kept going awry, and I thought that eventually I would dedicate some time to learning Pipes.  Well, I didn’t.  But this week I tried again because I wanted to aggregate some blog feeds into a single feed and display it on a web page. This time I was successful.  I was also able to make an extremely simple Flickr pipe to show some river images.

I don’t think I’ve become more adept at using Pipes, but that Pipes is now a bit easier to use.  There are some powerful tools for aggregating, filtering and translating feeds in Pipes that are worth exploring and that would be great for research and course guides.  And now that I’ve had some success, I’m more likely to play around with Pipes some more.  If you’d like to get started, check out Jody Condit Fagan’s CIL 2008 presentation called “Mashups for the Nontechies: Yahoo! Pipes”  She has some homework for you there.  If you’ve had some success with Pipes, I’d like to hear about it (leave a comment?).


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ShoZu: mobile connecting to your social network

Now that I have a fancy phone (T-mobile Wing), I’m beginning to explore mobile applications. The first application I’m trying is ShoZu. shozuShowZu caught my eye because of its promises to connect me with Flickr, Facebook and other sites. My first test was posting photos to my Flickr space. Before posting, using my phone I downloaded the application. Then I chose Flickr and Facebook as sites which I wanted ShoZu to connect. this was a somewhat confusing process because I initiated the download and the site connections by going to their website using my laptop. The download didn’t take until I used my cell phone to download. I also was a little confused about when my sites were connected and set up but once everything was set up, I easily started sending photos to my Flickr account. You can see a couple of the uploaded photos. Before sending, if you want you can name your photos, add a description and tag them. Here, I did for one but not the other photo.

flickrnshozu

Nifty! Pretty easy way to move your photos from your cell to other locations. ShoZu offers other services that I haven’t tried out yet. You can download feeds from your friends, read and reply to comments and update your status. Once I’m ready to take the next step, I’ll have to try these out. In the meantime, it’s photo uploading for me.


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picnik - easy online photo editing

I’m a longtime user of Photoshop, but I have to say that picnik offers almost everything I need, and it’s so easy! Once you upload a picture, you can edit (color, red eye, contrast, levels, etc) and create (add text and images, color the photo, fade the edges, round the corners, etc). I uploaded a simple color photograph of my husband and quickly made the following changes in less than 10 minutes! I love all the font choices (I’m a font addict). This is the BEST free photo editing software I’ve found…enjoy!


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Textorizer - pictures made of a thousand words

Textorizer takes one picture and transforms it into another composed entirely of text. I was drawn to this tool because I saw some great results in the textorizer group on Flickr, so I thought I’d try it. I used the the web interface (textorizer1, the so-called easy way) to transform a photo of fellow ‘doodader Michael Baird into in a composite of the words “infodoodads mb” My results are okay, but I think they would have been better had I chosen a photo that didn’t have such a busy background. Choosing an image with a high degree of contrast between the background and foreground might also be a good idea. There aren’t too many tips on the textorizer web site. And it turns out that some of the textorizer images I liked were probably made with a combination of photo-editing tools and textorizer 2 (the hard way) that has to be downloaded and compiled.

MB

mbtextorizor


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PicLens - full screen 3D slide shows

My husband sent me a link to PicLens a few weeks ago, and it’s really kind of interesting! Hmmm. I suppose I shouldn’t be that surprised… The install is quick, and if you’re a regular searcher for images, it does a great job of giving you a view of many images at once. I did a search on Google for images of Morocco, and with PicLens installed, when I mouse over an image, an arrow appears over the image. Clicking on that, I get the “photo wall,” a surprisingly nice interface for browsing photos. Searching Google for images without PicLens just isn’t the same. And PicLens isn’t just for stills — it will do the same for videos, including YouTube video. A left-click and flick of the mouse in some direction, moves the wall of images, and clicking on one zooms in for a larger view. You can easily jump out of the PicLens 3D view, back into the native search tool. You can also search from within the PicLens interface. Links include Google, YouTube, Smugmug, Photobucket, Flickr, Yahoo, and DeviantArt. PicLens can be enabled on other sites as well, so it would be interesting to see it used as an interface to a digital library photo collection, or as a way to browse book jackets or other book art.

piclens


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dashwire - take your phone online

So have you ever been at work and thought to yourself “I wonder if I got any new text messages this morning…” but don’t want to dig around for your cell phone and wave it around to let your co-workers know what you’re up to? In comes Dashwire. It essentially brings the functionality of your mobile phone to your desktop. It has a great dashboard that shows your text messages, call history, contacts, pictures, video, ringtones, voicemail, and even bookmarks.

You sign up for an account, install the software on your phone, and you’re all set. In the initial setup it can take a very long time to sync everything together. I had about 400 pictures on my phone and it restarted several times while transferring them so took a few hours. Once that is done, it does a quick update periodically to get recent changes.

My favorite feature is the text message module. You can view text messages as well as reply to and create new ones. You compose in the browser and then it sends the message to your phone to then send via your network. So as far as your friends know, you are sending messages from your phone. It also has a search feature for your messages, really handy!

Another neat feature is sending photos to services such as Flickr, Facebook, Twitter, Bebo. It is normally a pain to send my mobile photos to Flickr one by one. I can associate my Dashwire account with my Flickr account and in a few clicks have the photo feeding right into my photostream. Nifty, right? You can also e-mail or MMS them from Dashwire as well.

And, probably the most important feature of all. Dashwire is your backup copy of everything! You drop your phone in a toilet or in the big tank at SeaWorld and smashed by Shamu, your contacts will be safe.


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Flickr Video: possibly unnecessary, but definitely fun

It’s pretty obvious that we love Flickr and Flickr apps around here; we’ve reviewed all kinds of fun tools that make use of Flickr photos to do their thing. Now Flickr has released a new fun feature of its own: Flickr Video.

You’re probably thinking “Video! How innovative!”

No, wait, you’re probably thinking “haven’t they heard of YouTube?”

So there are already lots of places to upload video out there on the web. Flickr does what it does, photos, really well. Why on earth would they add videos? On some level it does make sense. Many (most?) digital cameras also record video so it’s not unusual to have both video and photos from the same event. Flickr’s tools for organizing photos and sharing them with friends, family, and the rest of the world are some of the best and they work equally well for video clips.

To make long-time Flickr members feel better they’re calling them “long photos” which might not appease the anti-video folks but amuses me. They are limiting video length to 90 seconds and only “pro” (i.e. paying) members are able to upload videos, so it really does have an entirely different feel than the specifically video-focused sites that I’ve used. It feels like…Flickr. Not convinced? Check out Fridgets, Flickr’s “test meme” of videos shot from inside the refrigerator. There’s even someone who keeps books in the fridge….

Although (or maybe because) I never even considered having the option to upload videos along with my Flickr pics, I’m actually pretty excited about the possibilities. It might be a fun challenge to see what kind of tutorials we could make in 90 seconds–even I don’t get distracted that quickly!


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