Filed under: YouTube

Emailing a Youtube video

Hi, i have another question, i have watched a funny youtube video and would love to be able to send it to my email address as an attachment (not a link) so that i can send it to others.
Do you or someone you know, know how i can do this.
Thank you Gayle

This is a topic we have discussed here before so can definitely help

I have 2 choices for you - one uses a program you install and one works over the internet (no install)

This Mullies post from January 2009 discusses how to use SaveYoutube. From the Site:

NEW! Download YouTube videos online without even copy-and-pasting the URL

Just write 'save' in front of the URL in the address bar and hit enter. For example: http://saveyoutube.com/watch?v=dXP2GdqYCOM

So this is the easiest way. However I do like the using the Freemake Videodownloader program we discussed a couple of months ago. We posted instructions for use here:

 

How to download nearly any song from the internet using YouTube

If you follow the instructions you can't go wrong - just make sure you select 'only download' if you want to keep the video and audio and not just the audio (as described in the post)

A word of advice though - why would you want to download the video to email?
Why not just send them the link to the YouTube video?
Either way they have to watch on the PC but I would guess most videos would end up a pretty large file for download and many email programs and internet providers don't handle large email attachments well. If you do need to share large files via email or otherwise then this post might help you files  

How to share LARGE files like videos

So that's 2 ways to skin a cat and a word of advice to avoid the cat-skinning all together :)
Hope that helps

 

YouTube announces post-production editing suite

YouTube announces post-production editing suite

15 Sep 2011

If your tabby cat looked like a shabby cat during that last take, have no fear – YouTube has announced an editing suite for budding cinematographers to tweak and improve their videos before inflicting them upon the general public.

In addition to handy rotation, stabilisation, brightness and contrast adjustments, users can also chuck in the standard sepia and vignette effects for an extra little pinch of madness. Check out some of the possiblities below, but be warned – it features dogs in people clothes.

 

Now you can upload your videos to YouTube and then edit them to suit yourself with tools provided. Until now you needed to edit the videos on your own computer (or another site) before sharing to YouTube so for some this may be a simpler option
However given the upload speed of most (Australian) broadband connections I doubt this will appeal to most of us. Video and still cameras take video at pretty high resolutions these days which means big files to upload so for most of us editing and downsizing the video BEFORE you upload I makes more sense.

How to download nearly any song from the internet using YouTube

here are my Step by Step instructions

  1. Go to Freemake.com and download Free Video Downloader (FVD) - it's free
  2. Install FVD and open the program
  3. Open your browser and go to Youtube
  4. Search for a song you want and start to play it
  5. Click in the address bar of your browser and copy the address - should be http://www.youtube.com/?????
    Fvd
  6. Go to FVD and click Paste URL
  7. In a few seconds FVD will check the song details on Youtube
    Most videos have multiple 'qualities/sizes' of video file to choose from. But if we are concentrating on the audio only there is usually only 2 choices: mp3 48KBps or AAC 112 KBps. The AAC file will be better audio quality than the MP3 which is more compressed
    So under te section labelled "1. Choose quality" select the smallest file size that includes AAC audio 
  8. iTunes default format is AAC so if you are using iTunes or an iPod you are set. Otherwise you may need to download and convert later
  9. Note - the quality of the audio depends mostly on the original video - YouTube can have lots of copies of the same song and many are much better quaity than others. Tip - look for HD in the title
  10. Under 'Choose Action' select 'Extract original audio'
    The other 2 options are
    'Only download' the video in selected format, or
    Download the video and 'Convert to' another format - there are a few to choose from
  11. Check the 'Save To' location - click the button to change it if you like
  12. Press download. In a few moments - success

Hope this works for you
Any questions or problems post a comment below

So what is this Twitter thing? YouTube knows

So what is this new social media thing Twitter all about I hear you ask?

Well I have been on Twitter for about a year or so. It is a quick message writing service where you can publish notes that anyone can view. Kind of like a blog page but more like a 'status update'. Those who have used Facebook will know what I mean.

There has been a huge surge in popularity as more celebrity users come on board. Oprah did a special on it one day and the users doubled overnight or something.

Anyway - if you want a more comprehensive description of Twitter and how it works then it is off to YouTube which has loads of 'How-To' type videos about Twitter. The MakeUseOf blog has compiled a list of 7 good choices to start.

Check them out: Top 7 Twitter Tutorials on YouTube

If you do succumb to the Twitter phase then I have 2 suggestions.

  1. Follow me @Noblejoker, and
  2. Give Tweetdeck a try - it is the best desktop Twitter software I have used

Mulligrubs Jan 09

Here is a follow up to a few things discussed at the January Mullies meeting

Broadband Pricing and Plans available in Ulladulla area

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As always the Whirlpool Broadband Choice site is the place to compare your options. As discussed ADSL 2 plans are available now from Telstra and companies reselling Telstra services. The really competitive prices available in Metro areas aren’t here yet though.

Blu-Ray Disc Players/Burners

Someone asked about Blu-Ray discs. Blu-Ray discs (BD) are the new format of discs that can hold a lot more data than DVDs. Here’s the comparison:

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  Single Layer Dual Layer
CD 700mb n/a
DVD 4.7gb 8.5gb
Blu-Ray 25gb 50gb

More details at Wikipedia 

So as you can see the capacity of Blu-Ray discs is 10 times that of DVD. The extra capacity is needed for true High Definition pictures and sound on your home theatre and is also useful for backing up a computer where the extra storage means more per disc.

Just like when DVD tech first came out the prices of the machines and media (discs) started out ridiculously high. Burners were over $1,000. Last night I suggested they were still $300 plus but got an ad email today offering BD/DVD burners (for desktop not laptop PC) for about $220 delivered. Laptop burners would be much more expensive. And note the actual discs are pretty dear too – Individual 25gb discs are over $10 each. 5 DVD discs are similar capacity for less than half this price but not as handy as having all in one. Like everything else in tech BD will rapidly become cheaper and more common, or is that more common and therefore cheaper :)

Downloading YouTube videos & Saving the Audio

Stan asked how to save the audio from YouTube videos. A quick search took me to the Digital Inspiration website – a great blog written by Amit. I am subscribed to his RSS feed and you might like to check it out. His post on how to accomplish Stan’s task is here: How To Rip Audio from YouTube Videos

He suggests using the Vixy.net website to save the audio directly from YouTube. You simply input the URL, wait for conversion (it takes a while), then click to download. just like the site we found the other night ListenToYouTube I found this a process a bit flaky.

Much easier to just download the video (as a FLV) and convert it to MP3. To download I use a FireFox extension called Video DownloadHelper. But there are any number of free download programs and extensions available.

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As mentioned at Mullies over a year ago you can use KissYoutube to download right in your browser – basically you just type KISS into the YouTube Address url and it takes you to their site to download the video. 

 

Once you have the video on your PC I recommend Format Factory to convert it. You can convert the FLV (Flash Video) file to another video format or to MP3 to capture the audio only. The Format Factory is free and is great for ripping DVD’s to video files, converting pictures to other formats, or converting videos for use on portable players, ipods or phones.
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Portable Music/Video players

As discussed with Romey it can be very frustrating with dealing with portable devices. Some manufacturers insist on making you use their software to load songs/videos onto a device. Then the software they give you wants to take over, duplicates your whole song library and clogs up your PC. Some players of course do not do this which makes life much easier. You can just drag and drop files like it was a USB flash drive.

Apple and Samsung (Romey had a Samsung T9 player) are difficult culprits but with iPods being so common a number of programs can interact with them. The choices for Romey’s Samsung are a bit more limited. But I believe that MediaMonkey should do the trick. It is a far more user friendly and very powerful music player and manager. If you don’t need to deal with video (it doesn’t do video very well) then I highly recommend it over Windows Media Player or other proprietary players. It handles Podcasts and Internet radio too. Because of the extra functions like syncing contacts etc on my Apple iPhone I still use iTunes and am quite happy with it but that won’t help Romey. I recommend downloading MediaMonkey and giving it a try. it shouldn’t duplicate your song library and hopefully will make creating playlists and syncing them with the player much simpler.

As always if anyone needs a bit more help with anything we discussed on the night or mentioned here then fire back a question and we will do our best to sort you out.

Media Coders – Movies to other formats

Grant asked me a question a few weeks ago and I thought I would share the answer

Do you know of any good free apps that can convert DVD video to Xvid or DivX? I have a Media player (think it only supports DivX) that is filling up and I need to convert to smaller formats

I have tried a few different programs and I am not totally happy with any of them. Among the ones I have tried are

WinFF and MediaCoder and both are open source and thus free

WinFF is a simple program to change file types. A couple of clicks and you are done. It doesn’t really support whole DVDs or FLV video from websites (like YouTube). But it’s handy if you want a simple program to change say an Apple QuickTime MOV file to DivX or similar

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MediaCoder is a much more sophisticated program with many, many options. For the casual or new user it can therefore be very complicated. However it is powerful and offers lots of options.

Both WinFF and MediaCoder use the FFmpeg engine for decoding and are free and open source.

For ripping DVD’s to alternative files like DivX I use DVDFab with the mobile option. It has lots of settings for converting DVDs to formats for your phone, iPod or portable device. It is also my program of choice for DVD copying and back-up. Unfortunately this program is not free. You should also be careful when dealing with copyrighted materials.

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To back up my opinions and provide a few alternatives here's a link to a newsletter I read a while ago
http://www.windowssecrets.com/2008/09/25/04-Converters-maximize-your-video-file-options

Windows Secrets newsletter is pretty good. There's a free version or you can get the paid version for $1 US (or however much you want to pay). Highly recommended reading!

When you are converting files for a specific device or purpose be careful what codec you select for the conversion. Grant will probably find his media centre can play at least some version of Xvid and/or DivX codec but it may be an older version. I have 2 different brand DVD players that play DivX and they play Xvid too. You just need to experiment a bit with what version of the codec you rip/compress to so for best results convert to the format that the player supports. Read the manual for the media centre and download the DivX codec version it specifies for maximum compatibility.

Being able to play the compressed files directly is great as you can fit lots of files on a single disc and still watch them in good quality. I have whole seasons of a TV show on a single DVD. Obviously you need a special kind of DVD player for this but they are pretty common these days.

The next question arises – what if I have a pile of compressed video, maybe from your camcorder or TV shows you have recorded, and you want to watch them or share with friends who don’t have a special DVD player?

You need to turn them back into a DVD of course and I will give you a list of programs to try for this too in a separate post.

Free Stuff from the Net

Here’s a couple of lists and links to some free stuff available on the internet

The 150 Best Online Flash Games

Source: http://www.techcult.com/

Here is a list of 150 free Flash based games you can play online. They are divided by type like Arcade or Action and feature some very simple and some very complex games.

Give Throw Paper a go for 10 minutes of mindless entertainment or Fantastic Contraption (pictured) for some real thought provoking fun

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55 Free Online Tools

Source: http://www.emmaalvarez.com

This list of some free resources available on the internet is from a girl named Emma. Rather than the games above these are useful tools to help you achieve something. Just like the specific programs you might have on your computer except these are accessible for free from anywhere via the web.

Warning: if you use these sort of online apps to do stuff be very careful about your privacy. Be conscious of what data you are sending out into the unknown.

I think Emma missed a few I would have included like:
Gmail (or Google Apps if you own a domain)
Google Reader
Auctiva for creating those eBay auction listings
AuctionStealer for winning the eBay auctions you bid on
Delicious.com for storing your bookmarks on line and sharing them
Blogger for creating and hosting a web blog
Flickr or Picasa Web Albums for hosting photos online
Last.fm for tracking and sharing your musical tastes
Online file storage like Box.net or there are heaps of others
and of course YouTube the world’s favourite online video sharing site

What online applications do you use or games do you play. Let us know so we can all check them out.

Swimming around the Net

Here are some interesting articles/links from around the Internet

Web's Best 50 Free Downloads

Here’s a list of 50 free programs for you to download. In truth many of these you will  already have or have heard of but you may find something new here. If anyone on dial-up would like some of these programs downloaded and burned to CD just let me know

 

 

The Cyber Crime Hall of Fame

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Rules are made to be broken the same way networks are made to be hacked into. These are nine of the most infamous criminal hackers to ever see the inside of a jail cell.

 

 

 

Top 10 Amazing Physics Videos

There are 10 good videos on science type topics at this site. Videos best viewed with broadband but may work (eventually) with dial-up.

I like this one – water droplets in space!

 

 

 

 

Brain Games

Some Flash games to play on the net but these ones have a purpose. To sharpen your mind!

I like Split Words - This game requires you to form words from fragments. The words are compiled using a theme and may have two or three parts.

 

If anyone finds anything cool on the net send us through a link.

The Easiest Way to Save YouTube Videos: Kiss The Address Bar

Kiss YouTube offers an innovative approach for downloading video clips from YouTube. No browser bookmarklets, no software to install, just remember the KISS "Keep It Sweet & Simple" principle.
While you are watching a video clip on the YouTube website, just add the word "kiss" to the video URL in your browser address bar and hit enter. The video is ready to be saved on your computer in FLV format.
For instance, if the Youtube URI is something like youtube.com/watch?v=ls1954aa, you can download the clip by adding the word "kiss" in front of the youtube.com domain name. Hence the final address becomes kissyoutube.com/watch?v=ls1954aa which will have the link to save that clip.
KissYoutube.com [Thanks Gina Hughes]

The Easiest Way to Save Youtube Videos: Kiss The Address Bar

The Easiest Way to Save Youtube Videos: Kiss The Address Bar at Digital Inspiration - Software Reviews, Internet and Technology Guide