Hello,
Kind of funny...
http://throwawayyourtv.com/2006/12/conspiracy-theory-rock.html
See ya
--
Charles Iliya Krempeaux, B.Sc.
charles @ reptile.ca
supercanadian @ gmail.com
developer weblog: http://ChangeLog.ca/
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
More useful things to do with video online:
http://www.masternewmedia.org/news/2006/12/29/video_education_free_online_learning.htm
--
best regards,
Deirdré Straughan
www.beginningwithi.com (personal)
www.tvblob.com (work)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
During my flight back to the States yesterday, a Washington, D.C.
policy reporter who was covering the John Edwards YouTube announcement
emailed me a request to do an interview. While I would have been happy
to talk using Skype at 35,000 feet, everyone around me was sleeping so
I was emailed a
I plan to post one video each week, on Mondays, every week of the
year. And I want to switch from iMovie to Final Cut Express (and
become proficient with the program) by June 30th.
Len
http://VideoPodChronicles.com
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, [chrisbrogan.com] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Well I start the year planning a six months artist residency using
Online/New media to work with young people to examine climate change. I
am working with the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH)
http://www.lec.lancs.ac.uk/ to find out about the hard data behind
climate change.
I also plan a
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Jeff Pulver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
The last thing anyone needs is to see legacy broadcasting rules
applied to the Internet.
But what happens when legacy broadcasting behavior and content are
applied to the internet?
We are seeing quite a bit of
A very interesting observation of the MSM ignoring videoblogging's
role in the anouncemenet:
http://newteevee.com/2006/12/28/msm-ignores-edwards-youtube-debut/
...Some of the MSM accounts do reference the fact that Edwards
official campaign Web site went live briefly Wednesday by mistake3, a
Thanks, Deirdre, very cool!
Lisa
http://lisaharper.org
On 12/29/06, Deirdre Straughan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
More useful things to do with video online:
http://www.masternewmedia.org/news/2006/12/29/video_education_free_online_learning.htm
--
best regards,
Deirdré Straughan
here was a prototype UI using enric's vpip javascript:
http://vlogwall.com/vodcasts
On 12/28/06, JD Lasica [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anyone have an example of a video showcase page that they think
is pretty cool?
I'm not talking about services like video hosting sites that display
The reporter that interviewed Jeff channeled the typical DC/regulator
mentality perfectly. That is, if broadcast TV is regulated and then
you find this thing that happens to be delivered over the Intenret,
but looks a lot like TV, well then, shouldn't that be regulated, too?
Of course, the
66 sq km of the Ayles Ice Shelf broke off yesterday...
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1click_id=31art_id=iol1167394970298B253
will be following your site and hoping we see more things we can do to
help out there...
On 12/29/06, Adam and Vikki [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well I start the
correction: it broke off 16 months ago, identified by satellite imagery only
yesterday...
On 12/29/06, Digital Buddha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
66 sq km of the Ayles Ice Shelf broke off yesterday...
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1click_id=31art_id=iol1167394970298B253
will be
Not all regulation is bad, because it is not always as simple
as turn the channel or don't watch it, it is a matter of respect
for your fellow human beings
Heath
http://batmangeek7.blogspot.com
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, sean_m_garrett
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The reporter
I working on a project where I'll follow a small group of people as
they ride their bicycles from the Pacific to the Atlantic coasts - and
I'll interview all the other travelers that cross their path (and I've
done several bike-trips like this, you meet a lot more people than
you'd assume).
I'm
Very true, Heath. And, I'm sure many of us had our Ayn Rand phase and
then got over it ;)
Still, what Jeff and I warning of is the slippery slope of regulation.
Take, for example, something far away from sex and politics. How about
closed captioning for the hearing impaired? That's something
Another interesting question to pose has to do with the regulation of
money going to political ads. Does this even extend to the Internet? Can
political candidates exploit lapses in campaign expenditure regulation to
pay video bloggers for time on their blogs? What about advertisement
storms
Hi folks,
Here is a list of university webpages that
offer free videos of their lectures online. Most of
them are streaming, and I haven't noticed
anything yet regarding videography but
these could be useful anyway.
http://home.comcast.net/~plutarch/lectures.html
Enjoy,
Zack
I have no idea who Ayn Rand is (although I did just do a quick search
and read something quickly), regardless, not saying we should stick
our heads in the sand and say it can't happen but there are issues
that do need to be addressed...and it will happen one way or another,
so yes being
Good question. And, it's been a big debate in DC (and among poltical
bloggers).
As of this last March, the Federal Election Commision's stance is that
they want to encourage as much Internet political discourse as
possible as the medium grows. I aplologize for the long cut and
paste, but think
Traditionally, the legal rationale behind regulating broadcast TV is
that broadcast spectrum is a finite and very limited resource which
can only accommodate a relatively small number of channels (or radio
stations, for that matter). Hence the government has to step in and
make sure the
But I did think that part of the equal time has merits, because it
does ensure (in theory) that all sides can be heard, one of the
things that could happen very easily is that a canadaite has a lot of
money and hires people to create and flood the internet with their
vidoes, etc, I don't
I think it was Kafka who said that the liberation of all revolutions
ultimately results in its own aristocracy and the bureaucracy to defend
it. See also George Orwell.
Me? I'll just have a drink and go find some kids doing capoeira to video.
It's less depressing. :)
--
Rhett.
Well, that's the beauty of Internet video. If you think there's a
real issue to address, go out and address it. Nobody's stopping you.
On Dec 29, 2006, at 3:03 PM, Heath wrote:
But I did think that part of the equal time has merits, because it
does ensure (in theory) that all sides can be
Hi folks,
Here is a list of university webpages that
offer free videos of their lectures online. Most of
them are streaming, and I haven't noticed
anything yet regarding videography but
these could be useful anyway.
http://home.comcast.net/~plutarch/lectures.html
Enjoy,
Zack
Thanks
I tried
While channel surfing tonight I landed on the 20/20 show about video
on the internet. They mainly covered YouTube. Topics ranged from
privacy concerns, to war video shot by soldiers in Iraq from cell
phones, to political news as Senator George Allen calling a political
vidoer Macaca, and so on.
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