First it was some of the world's greatest coastline, then some very talented birds, now an audition for a scary Halloween flick. After several of these, you can splice them all together for the ultimate California adventure. Could be great run as a loop at Adam's wedding as the boat rocks back & forth.
Your career as a videographer has no where to go but up.
Mammals that fly. Still hard to believe, and amazing to see. Particularly in the living room! I think his/her wing is formed by the equivalent of our thumb bone(?).
I used my thumbs to hack my camera (actually, I just read the manual with more interest) to capture movie clips as .avi files on our PC. I now have a couple of short clips ready to load that, like yours, show things that stills don't really capture as well.
The first step is uploading your videos to youtube, this is easy. just go to the youtube.com and hit the upload link, you can't miss it (it's a yellow button). from there youtube walks you through the process, you really can't screw up. you'll first be asked to create a youtube account (free) then you follow the steps provided.
When you have it on youtube let me know and I'll give the next step (getting it onto mckinneytree, also easy)
YouTube worked well for us. It took a while to upload (more than an hour after we submitted it, I'm guessing), but it's a lot of data, and we just let it hum along.
First it was some of the world's greatest coastline, then some very talented birds, now an audition for a scary Halloween flick. After several of these, you can splice them all together for the ultimate California adventure. Could be great run as a loop at Adam's wedding as the boat rocks back & forth.
Your career as a videographer has no where to go but up.
Whoa! The creepy crawl/walk at 1:10 is totally rad.
Mammals that fly. Still hard to believe, and amazing to see. Particularly in the living room! I think his/her wing is formed by the equivalent of our thumb bone(?).
I used my thumbs to hack my camera (actually, I just read the manual with more interest) to capture movie clips as .avi files on our PC. I now have a couple of short clips ready to load that, like yours, show things that stills don't really capture as well.
J: I want to see your videos!!
The first step is uploading your videos to youtube, this is easy. just go to the youtube.com and hit the upload link, you can't miss it (it's a yellow button). from there youtube walks you through the process, you really can't screw up. you'll first be asked to create a youtube account (free) then you follow the steps provided.
When you have it on youtube let me know and I'll give the next step (getting it onto mckinneytree, also easy)
Hey, thanks Brian!
YouTube worked well for us. It took a while to upload (more than an hour after we submitted it, I'm guessing), but it's a lot of data, and we just let it hum along.
Our first upload attempt is called RHMLegoMovie0001, on this channel: itsawrap2002.
Transferring to the tree will be fun, too. It'll open up new tools to make contact seem that much more direct. Your clips have been fascinating.
Very nice Jeff and Riley! Lego's have come a long way, wow.
(ps, I linked your videos - just click on the name of the video)
B: Shannon thinks the same about you