Remove Audio Remove Firefox Remove Music
article thumbnail

Screencast of the Week - Ian Ozsvald and ProCasts

TechSmith Camtasia

The audio quality is great on this screencast which is important as viewers are generally intolerant of poor audio. The background audio music was a great touch and added polish to the screencast. The video was recorded with Camtasia Studio 5 and audio recorded using his sE2200a mic in Audacity. Ian also said, ".

article thumbnail

85+ Top Tools & Resources for Course Creators

learnWorlds

More specifically, it allows you to share photos and videos that are accompanied with cool special movement effects and music accompaniment. Animoto’s photo presentation tool is synced with the rhythm of the music you have chosen while at the same time it informs you about the steps of the video editing process all the way to its completion.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

My top ten tools

Clive on Learning

I'm going to include IE7 under this heading, which is probably the tool I use the most after Outlook – the improvements such as tabbed browsing mean that it has caught up with Firefox (sounds like some form of heresy). Flash: I am a closet programmer and secretly prefer code to words, although I'm on the wagon at the moment.

Tools 40
article thumbnail

e-Clippings (Learning As Art): Speaking of gold diggers.Hey! Steve Jobs!

Mark Oehlert

e-Clippings (Learning As Art) Home Archives Subscribe About My Social Networks « Adaptive Path.Publishing the audio from UX Week 2007.for We are plainly witnessing a restructuring of the music and newspaper businesses, but their suffering isn’t unique, it’s prophetic."--Clay Steve Jobs! Where the hell is my $200?!?

article thumbnail

e-Clippings (Learning As Art): "Listening for Learning" (IT Conversations)

Mark Oehlert

Deep knowledge comes through reading, but audio, especially when you can ask questions, is usually the best way to learn about something new. " They actually have a poll up online asking the following: Is audio an effective way for you to learn? The question is formed as if all audio is the same. Turns out not so much.

article thumbnail

e-Clippings (Learning As Art): "MIT Researchers Advance Lecture Capture with Search Capabilities" (Campus Technology)

Mark Oehlert

How do these sound for capabilities: running video and audio of the lecture and a transcript of the lecture which scrolls with the lecture and underlines words in the lecture as theyre spoken. We are plainly witnessing a restructuring of the music and newspaper businesses, but their suffering isn’t unique, it’s prophetic."--Clay

Lecture 32
article thumbnail

e-Clippings (Learning As Art): "The iPhone dominates the smartphone market in mobile media consumption" (ZDNet)

Mark Oehlert

So for content developments sake, looking down the numbers, Id say there is an argument here for focusing on audio as a main component of phone-based content (Im going to quit saying mobile as a general term because who knows what that means anymore - PSP, iPod, cell phone, smartphone, iPhone, UMPC, or whatever). books futures Web 2.0

iPhone 32