Interesting. I'm thinking that that shift will continue for a bit. The
long timers on the list had to figure out how to do it. 

Then you figure how to do it better and cheaper. Then the community
starts asking other questions. Of technique, quality, ethics,
distribution and the world beyond our gates.

The next wave will ask by necessity, What's in if for me, how can
apply this to my current needs and aspirations. 

There are other folks "teaching" vlogging such as Videomaker magazine
who calls it "Vodcasting" They started a series of articles, have some
training videos and they are putting they thoughts and interpretations
on how to do it for their readers. Different views, different agendas. 

What are the Yahoo groups core values and how do we transmit them to
the newbies and other folks stepping up to the camcorder?

Gena

http://outonthestoop.blogspot.com
http://pcclibtech.blogspot.com

There are other paths to vlogging

--- In [email protected], "johnleeke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Of course, we might expect the weekly video blogger's FlashMeeting to
> be attended entirely by dedicated vloggers. Just about a year ago
> Stephanie Bryant and Susan (kittykitty) were saying there's mostly
> talk on vlogging about how to vlog:
> 
> http://flash.kmi.open.ac.uk:8080/fm/fmm.php?pwd=80440a-3896&jt=00:07:16
> 
> but at this past FlashMeeting Enric observed that most people at the
> meeting were from outside the vlog-o-sphere, using vlogging to support
> other objectives:
> 
> http://flashmeeting.open.ac.uk/fm/fmm.php?pwd=1a1014-7445&jt=01:47:26
> 
> such as,
> 
> preserving historic buildings,
> 
> selling coffee,
> 
> expounding on life in Tokyo,
> 
> documenting family history,
> 
> etc.
>


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