This post is a departure from my normal blog post subject matter, See the end for details.
It's the 21st century and sending the classical Christmas or holiday letter is passe. Impress your family and friends by creating a Holiday video this year and uploading it to Youtube.com. All you need is a video camera, you can use your cellphone, your laptop webcam, or your video camera. Follow these simple instructions and soon you'll be producing, directing and starring in the most unique holiday greeting your holiday card list will receive this year. Depending on how effort you want to put into your holiday epic you can have it shot, edited and ready for viewing in as little as one hour. No special skills or equipment is required as long as you are enthusiastic.
Step 1: Getting ready, picking a location and writing a script
Before you shoot your video it's important that you prepare properly. The difference between a good video and a boringly bad video is in the preparation.
Find a uncluttered place to shoot your video. It can be either inside or outside but you want a location that doesn't have too much to distract the videos viewers from your script. This doesn't mean you can't add some festive spirit to your room, a poinsettia or some holiday decorations will add a festive touch.
Make sure your location is well lit. If you are inside use as much light as practical, bring in extra lights from other rooms if you can. The cheaper the camera the more light you need.
Step 2: Getting set up
Almost ready to go.
Step 3: Shooting the video
Step 4: Upload and share your video
Don't forget
The cheaper the camera the more light you need.
Choose an uncluttered location to shoot your video
Write down what you want to say before you start
Keep it short 2-5 minutes maximum
Record your message multiple times so you can pick the best version
Relax, smile and speak slowly
How this post came to be
This post was originally written for Mahalo for a page entitled How to Send a Youtube Holiday Video Greeting. I misinterpreted the task and wrote this piece instead of what Mahalo expected, a page on how to use Youtube Greeting Cards, which aren't active yet. I submitted the completed page and it was rejected because I hadn't used any references which are required as part of the new Mahalo quality standards. I appealed the rejection on the grounds that I had the requisite experience to fly reference free. My appeal was unsuccessful so I decided to use the work as a blog post instead.
When it was time to make another video I asked a question on Mahalo Answers to help me come up with some ideas for a topic. After a few people answered I decided to start with a video on wrapping Christmas presents thinking that it would prove useful to the denizens of Youtube during this holiday season. When I told my wife of my video plans she suggested she should be the one in the video because her gift wrapping skills were better than mine. I told her I'd be happy to let her star in the video. After a bit of through she decided that she wasn't ready to be the gift wrapping mentor to the world so I ended up wearing all the hats of video production and hosting which made me the gift wrap professional, well dedicated amateur actually.
As always prepping for the video shoot was more time consuming than actually shooting the video. Finding a spot where I could shoot the video, lighting, writing the intro and then down into the basement to find suitable wrapping paper to wrap the gift. Find the tape and scissors and I was ready to go. Shoot the video and then it was off to computer for editing. Trying to remember the magic dvgrab incantation I used last time, This time I'm going to write it down here so I won't forget for next time.
[codespan]dvgrab -f mpeg2
mv dvgrab-002.m2t dvgrab-002.mpg
[/codespan]
Though mplayer couldn't play the files dvgrab created Cinelerra had no problem importing them. The newer version of Cinelerra I installed after my problems last time worked almost perfectly, no crashing and only two freezes during file import because of table of content creation issues when I hadn't renamed the m2t files. Transitions, rendering a frame to a png to use as a background for the title and titling all went smoothly. Uploading to Youtube.com turned out to be the biggest hassle, uploading 820 Megs on a 60 KB/s Rogers cable internet uplink turned out not only to be painfully slow tieing up my internet connection for more than three hours before failing, repeat and it failed again. That's all behind me now and the Christmas gift wrap video was finally all wrapped up.
Ever since I asked my first question on Mahalo with good results I have been dabbling in the Mahalo universe. At first this was by answering question on Mahalo Answers, more recently my Mahalo participation has also included page management. Ah the beginning of June Mahalo allowed their users to claim and build pages on Mahalo. In exchange for building pages Mahalo offers to split the Adsense revenue with the page manager. Recently Mahalo has targeted How To pages as an area they want to build out and has also offered users money up front to build the page in addition to the fifty/fifty split on the Adsense revenue. Some page managers have hit the jackpot but even if you don't hit a wildly popular page you can still earn a few dollars for creating a page and keeping it updated. Reviewing the statistics shows that the majority of members are earning less than $50 a month from their pages but it's important to remember that at least Mahalo pays. There are plenty of other sites that rely on user generated contact without flowing any of the revenue back to their users.
The How To pages I have built, How to Make a Savoy Corpse Reviver Cocktail, How to Make a Dirty Mother Cocktail,How to Apply for WIC in New York and How to Avoid Panty Lines to name a few are a combination of quirky and niche so I don't really expect them to generate much revenue for me but that doesn't mean that someone who is more driven and dedicated than I could do quite well for a minimal amount of work.
One area where Mahalo excels is game walkthroughs. A day or two ago Mahalo built a page with a walkthrough for Call of Duty, Modern Warfare 2 which includes eighteen HD videos. I expect that will make someone a fairly nice pile of cash. Other areas that have proven to be quite lucrative for Mahalo page managers are coupon pages and game cheat codes.
If you want to give Mahalo a try I would suggesting trying out the How To Rush week tasks. Mahalo pays $7 Mahalo and the How To editors will guide you in getting the format right. Full disclosure, if you if you decide you like it and build ten How To pages based on my referral I get $100. If building pages isn't of interest to you then Mahalo Answers may be more to your liking. I answer questions while watching TV which means that Mahalo pays you to watch TV.
updated Tuesday Oct. 27th
After a bit of digging around I managed to find a newer version of Cinelerra for Centos 5 in the ATrpms repository which rendered my transitions correctly after I installed it. It also prompted me to run echo "0x7fffffff" > /proc/sys/kernel/shmmax when it started up. I'm not sure if it was the new version or the increased shared memory which solved the problem but now I can go crazy with transitions. I'm going to leave the cupcake video as is but will use transitions sparingly but to great effect in my next video.
When I was working on my HD masterpiece. How to Make Bacon Chocolate Cupcakes I need a video editing tool to run on Centos 5. I had a bit of experience with Cinelerra from when I had used it to edit my How to Make A Guitar Pick From a Credit Card video. First observation, Cinelerra crashes a lot, so much in fact that it has a restore option on the menu to reload your project after a crash and checkpoints changes to the recovery file after every change.
After getting the edits done and enduring quite a few crashes I tried adding some transitions, wipes and fades where I wanted to show the passage of time. Unfortunately every time I tried to use one the render would freeze in the middle of the transition. I tried a number of different transitions but was never successful in getting one to work. I tried to use the latest version of Cinelerra in case the problem had been fixed in a later version than 2.1-0.14 which was the version available for Centos 5. Even though I got it to compile it crashed almost immediately when I ran it. In the end rendered the video without the transitions, you can see the results below. If anyone has ran into the transition render freeze issue and knows the solution please let me know.
About a month ago Yahoo changed something on the Yahoo Messenger servers that stopped the version of Pidgin which is installed on my EEEPC 701 from connecting. Asus has stopped updating the software for the version of the EEEPC I have and after some fruitless Google searching for a prepackaged solution I was prepared a few weeks ago to bite the bullet and install the Linux development tools on my EEEPC that would allow me to compile the latest version of Pidgin so I could use it on my EEEPC.
I decided to give Google one more try and the people at EEEUser Forum came through for me again with and updated .deb package for the EEEPC. I'm not sure the precise query I used but the only way for me to find it again was to search for the package that I downloaded and installed. Installing the update was quick and painless and soon my EEEPC was back happily connecting to Yahoo Messenger.
To download the updated pidgin.db package click the link pidgin-2.6.2-4.deb.
One you download the file to your EEEPC updating pidgin is as simple as opening a terminal window by typing CTRL-ALT-T and entering the command
sudo dpkg -i pidgin_2.6.2-4.deb
another option is to right click on the file in the file manager and choose the "install deb" option.
If you get an error message you may have to remove the previous version of pidgin first by entering
sudo apt-get remove pidgin pidgin-data libpurple0
Good luck and happy chatting.