Media’n’ the Net: Create your ‘TV channel’ with YouTube

YouTube has been a godsend for many bloggers who create video for whatever reason. In fact, I had used it to upload a bunch of presentations that my students had made over the last year or so, but towards the beginning of the year, when Dreamhost updated its own media facilities to include an FLV player, hosting and an embedded in WP plugin, I was all set.

YouTube had increased the restrictions to 100mb of upload, and a maximum of 10 minutes. Now, with Dreamhost, I could create videos of any length, and did so. But, I was frustrated. There was no easy way to put the videos together, to create a kind of TV channel. I could do so by posting everything within individual posts, and visitors could click through each post by themselves. But it really doesn’t have the “Channel” atmosphere.

Recently, though, I had a look at YouTube again, which I haven’t logged into for sometime. Lo! and behold, they’d created a ‘customer player’. There are two kinds, I much prefer the other one, but this one fits the pages of my website, nicely.

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Step 1: In fact, it’s quite easy to do this. Log into your YouTube account, scroll down to find the ‘custom player’ section.

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Step 2: Click to create a custom player, and you’ll be taken to the appropriate page.

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Step 3: Enter your information, and choose the color scheme from one of the nine options.

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Step 4: Choose your layout style, I like the second, but it’s too wide. The first one has an interactive style that is very attractive, though. (It’s featured above).

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Step 5: Your content needs to be organized in a playlist (I’ll assume you know how to do that!). Select your playlist, and hit ‘select’.

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Step 6: Then click on ‘generate code’ and you’ll get a lot of code to embed just like a regular video. Paste the entire code into your website as-is. Hit ‘save’ and ‘publish’ (if you are using WordPress).

Then you’re done. You should see something like the video screen at the beginning. Have fun.

Updating my PC: Will it be enough?

Well, to continue my saga about the PC, I recently got my fixed PC back but it has been gutted completely. If you remember, I took it in to upgrade the DVD drive and the video card just to get better and faster video editing work done.

BUT…

I was told the Motherboard was faulty, and had to have it replaced. Given that the computer was nearly four years old, I was lucky to find a compatible mother board. Then I had to have the VGA card upgraded, but the first one wouldn’t work at all with the mother board. It was quite a saga, as the repair shop replaced everything until they concluded that the VGA board was at fault (too cheap?). So they ordered a more expensive one, it worked.

I added a Sony DVD Burner as well as 512MB of Ram. Again, I’d shot for 1GB, but was told that I couldn’t … not enough slots! I thought Atlantic City didn’t have that problem!

And I replaced the hard drive with a newish one…

So, all in all, a new PC basically: motherboard, VGA card (ASUS N7600GS), Hard Disk, DVD burner, memory. Only the original case, the RAM, and the power supply are left!

Who knew it would be so much trouble? And the damage, NT$8,500, all in. But at least I managed to roll my PC back to XP SP1. It was so much snappier before I did the ‘right’ thing, and allowed M$ to update my software. Now, I don’t do that any more, despite the risk of being ‘attacked’. For my own needs, I decided that the risk of being ‘hacked’ was (if I surfed carefully) far less of a problem than a sluggish PC with numerous hotfixes and updates.

But that’s just my experience.