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AWS Morning Brief for the week of February 17, with Corey Quinn. Links:Amazon DynamoDB now supports auto-approval of quota adjustmentsAmazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) now adds full snapshot size information in Console and APIAmazon RDS for MySQL announces Extended Support minor 5.7.44-RDS.20250103Amazon Redshift Serverless announces reduction in IP Address Requirements to 3 per SubnetAWS Deadline Cloud now supports Adobe After Effects in Service-Managed FleetsAWS Network Load Balancer now supports removing availability zonesAWS CloudTrail network activity events for VPC endpoints now generally availableHarness Amazon Bedrock Agents to Manage SAP InstancesTimestamp writes for write hedging in Amazon DynamoDBUpdating AWS SDK defaults – AWS STS service endpoint and Retry StrategyLearning AWS best practices from Amazon Q in the ConsoleAutomating Cost Optimization Governance with AWS ConfigAmazon Q Developer in chat applications rename - Summary of changes - AWS Chatbot
Adobe After Effectsでアニメーション作成にチャレンジしているけど、意外と使えたというエピソードです。併用しているツールや、ほかのモーショングラフィック作成ツールについても話しました。=== 目次 ===00:00:00 Adobe After Effectsはこんなツール00:02:53 ほかのモーショングラフィック作成ツール00:05:05 オンラインセミナーで学べて良かった00:06:13 昔と変わらぬ操作感だけどなんとか使えた00:07:32 使い始める前段階の用語がわかりにくい00:08:29 細かく設定できるが手間とセンスが必要-------#アシカガCASTデジタル活用のヒントをスキマ時間で。話題のサービス、注目のソフトウェアの紹介、デジタルツールの活用術など、テック系情報をわかりやすくお届けします。月〜水 朝8時に更新■アシカガCAST文字起こし要約|アシカガコウジ|note https://note.com/ashikagacast/m/mbc989fbedb84■X(Twitter)アカウントhttps://twitter.com/ashikagacastApple Podcast、Spotify、Google Podcastなどでも配信しています。■アシカガCASTの聴き方http://typebot.io/ashikagacast ■アシカガノオトhttps://ashikaga.substack.com/
Adobe After Effectsでアニメーション作成にチャレンジしているけど、意外と使えたというエピソードです。併用しているツールや、ほかのモーショングラフィック作成ツールについても話しました。=== 目次 ===00:00:00 Adobe After Effectsはこんなツール00:02:53 ほかのモーショングラフィック作成ツール00:05:05 オンラインセミナーで学べて良かった00:06:13 昔と変わらぬ操作感だけどなんとか使えた00:07:32 使い始める前段階の用語がわかりにくい00:08:29 細かく設定できるが手間とセンスが必要-------#アシカガCASTデジタル活用のヒントをスキマ時間で。話題のサービス、注目のソフトウェアの紹介、デジタルツールの活用術など、テック系情報をわかりやすくお届けします。月〜水 朝8時に更新■アシカガCAST文字起こし要約|アシカガコウジ|note https://note.com/ashikagacast/m/mbc989fbedb84■X(Twitter)アカウントhttps://twitter.com/ashikagacastApple Podcast、Spotify、Google Podcastなどでも配信しています。■アシカガCASTの聴き方http://typebot.io/ashikagacast ■アシカガノオトhttps://ashikaga.substack.com/
Alex condivide la sua mattinata e le sue riflessioni riguardo al suo progetto attuale: un video promozionale mascherato da documentario che include interviste e riprese di aree archeologiche.Ha registrato diverse scene e utilizza tecniche come la mappa animata di Google Earth Studio e l'integrazione di clip mediante Adobe After Effects.Alex esplora l'idea di automatizzare il montaggio del video attraverso l'intelligenza artificiale, speculando su come un modello di linguaggio avanzato potrebbe suggerire l'inserimento di video specifici in base al testo parlato.Considera anche l'analisi dei video tramite algoritmi di IA per selezionare le immagini più adatte a coprire determinati segmenti narrativi, sognando un modo per semplificare la post-produzione e ridurre i costi.Riflette sulla democratizzazione degli strumenti di produzione video e sul potenziale impatto etico di tale tecnologia, che potrebbe marginalizzare i ruoli tradizionali nell'industria cinematografica e documentaria.[00:12:35] Spot[00:21:47] Il riassunto di Sciatta GPTTechnoPillzFlusso di coscienza digitale.Vieni a chiacchierare sul riot:https://t.me/TechnoPillzRiotSono su Mastodon: @shylock74@mastodon.unoI video di The Morning Rant sul canale YouTube di Runtime:https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgGSK_Rq9Xdh1ojZ_Qi-rCwwae_n2LmztAscoltaci live tutti i giorni 24/7 su: http://runtimeradio.itScarica l'app per iOS: https://bit.ly/runtAppContribuisci alla Causa andando su:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/
[Referências do Episódio] November 2024 Security Updates - https://msrc.microsoft.com/update-guide/releaseNote/2024-Nov APSB24-77 : Security update available for Adobe Bridge - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/bridge/apsb24-77.html APSB24-83 : Security update available for Adobe Audition - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/audition/apsb24-83.html APSB24-85 : Security update available for Adobe After Effects - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/after_effects/apsb24-85.html APSB24-86 : Security update available for Adobe Substance 3D Painter - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/substance3d_painter/apsb24-86.html APSB24-87 : Security update available for Adobe Illustrator - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/illustrator/apsb24-87.html APSB24-88 : Security update available for Adobe InDesign - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/indesign/apsb24-88.html APSB24-89 : Security update available for Adobe Photoshop - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/photoshop/apsb24-89.html APSB24-90 : Security update available for Adobe Commerce - https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/magento/apsb24-90.html FG-IR-24-199 - Named Pipes Improper Access Control - https://fortiguard.fortinet.com/psirt/FG-IR-24-199 FG-IR-24-144 - Privilege escalation via lua auto patch function - https://fortiguard.fortinet.com/psirt/FG-IR-24-144 FG-IR-23-475 - FortiOS - SSLVPN session hijacking using SAML authentication - https://fortiguard.fortinet.com/psirt/FG-IR-23-475 FG-IR-23-396 - Readonly users could run some sensitive operations - https://fortiguard.fortinet.com/psirt/FG-IR-23-396 (non-US) DSL-6740C :: All H/W Revisions :: End-of-Life / End-of-Service :: CVE-2024-11068 - Unauthorized Configuration Access Vulnerability - https://supportannouncement.us.dlink.com/security/publication.aspx?name=SAP10414 APT Actors Embed Malware within macOS Flutter Applications - https://www.jamf.com/blog/jamf-threat-labs-apt-actors-embed-malware-within-macos-flutter-applications/ ModeLeak: Privilege Escalation to LLM Model Exfiltration in Vertex AI - https://unit42.paloaltonetworks.com/privilege-escalation-llm-model-exfil-vertex-ai/ Hamas-affiliated Threat Actor WIRTE Continues its Middle East Operations and Moves to Disruptive Activity - https://research.checkpoint.com/2024/hamas-affiliated-threat-actor-expands-to-disruptive-activity/ LightSpy: APT41 Deploys Advanced DeepData Framework In Targeted Southern Asia Espionage Campaign - https://blogs.blackberry.com/en/2024/11/lightspy-apt41-deploys-advanced-deepdata-framework-in-targeted-southern-asia-espionage-campaign Visionaries Have Democratised Remote Network Access - Citrix Virtual Apps and Desktops (CVE Unknown) - https://labs.watchtowr.com/visionaries-at-citrix-have-democratised-remote-network-access-citrix-virtual-apps-and-desktops-cve-unknown/ Roteiro e apresentação: Carlos Cabral e Bianca Oliveira Edição de áudio: Paulo Arruzzo Narração de encerramento: Bianca Garcia
The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Motion graphics designers tend to enjoy the creative side of their jobs, but there can be aspects of their work, like editing and rendering slight variations of the same spot, that are best described as soul-sucking. Neb Savicic has lived that as a motion graphics designer, and with a couple of friends in Serbia, concluded there had to be a better way. So they put their heads together and, after testing interest, started Plainly - which automates video creation and produces finished spots at scale. Like 1,000s of videos in a matter of minutes. This is not a library of pre-made templates that end-users can then tweak. It's a SaaS tool used mainly by creatives in agencies and studios to take what's developed in a professional toolset - Adobe's AfterEffects - and plug it into Plainly's cloud platform. The net result is that a creative team that is charged with producing, let's say, 500 videos for a QSR chain can do that with one template and a spreadsheet file that has all the differences itemized per location. What might take weeks to accurately produce, instead takes one click and a few minutes to get rendered, ready-to-use videos. Subscribe from wherever you pick up new podcasts. TRANSCRIPT Neb, thank you for joining me. It's nice to chat with you. We met in Munich a couple of months ago. I didn't know a lot about Plainly. I wrote a piece when you did some sort of a partnership with SignageLive, but for those who don't know who you are, can you tell me about the company, what it does, and how and why it was started? Neb Savicic: First of all, thank you so much for having me. So Plainly is a product that helps creative teams automate and scale up video output while keeping the quality of their videos high. What that means, in a nutshell, is we have a platform that allows users to automatically render variations of their After Effects videos just by providing data that's going to be in those variations. So the benefit of automation is you can produce videos at scale. You can produce a lot of videos quickly without all the monkey work to do each of them, right? Neb Savicic: Yes, so the key benefit, and that's the problem we're solving, is that in many use cases, creatives have to spend their time changing text, changing images, and creating variations of the same templatized video they created a month ago for different markets, screens, and products. My background is actually in video. I was a motion designer before planning, and I always hated those kinds of projects, and that's where the inception story came from, and, I was like, there has to be some better way. So we created a platform where you can create one template, and one After Effects project, and then our platform will automatically create all of the different variations you need. At the same time, you can focus on different, more creative, and more important tasks. So I understand that for a lot of social media things, even for things like utility company bills, if they want to do a video summary, customer by customer, how would this be used in the context of digital signage or digital out of home? Neb Savicic: When I first came into this industry, and I was looking at the content that the companies were putting out, and I said this on another podcast, the one thing that always bugged me is that these companies invest so much money into their systems into their digital signage systems and the content doesn't look that good. You invest so much money to have this great system running in the background, and the thing that's actually displayed and the thing that your customers see is the thing that's getting the least amount of effort. So using a tool like ours, you can actually make sure that you have relevant content, personalized content, and updated content all the time on all of the screens. So you can imagine… This is the easiest example, but like a QSR where they have the same content on every screen in every restaurant across all the locations, and that's just because they have a limitation of human resources, they just don't have enough employees to create different content. So they're satisfied with the same stuff. With a tool like Plainly and the power we give you, you can actually create individualized content for each screen. So, let's say it's raining in London. You can make different content when it's raining compared to Manchester, where it's sunny, and you're going to sell different stuff, it's that ability to automatically create different individualized relevant personalized content on a large scale that's what we give to the digital sign, to our users from the digital signage industry. Do you have companies that are actively using this? I know I mentioned that a partnership was announced with SignageLive. SignageLive is always good about working with emerging companies doing interesting things, so it's not surprising they're one of the first to do that. But how are these company's customers using it? Neb Savicic: We work with many agencies, some of the biggest agencies, especially in the advertising and creative industries. These agencies are using it for digital signage for their clients and the way they're using it is exactly how I described it. They were spending so much time creating different variations of the same content and they realized they needed to offload this to machines and open up some of that time for our creative team to actually do something more, they paid these people a lot of money because they're great and spend time moving the pixels around, their users, agencies, and in-house creative teams all use Plainly in the same fashion, where you can just drop in a big CSV, a big Google sheet with all of the different video variations and in a click of a button you can get a hundred or a thousand different video variations. To be clear, this is not a template system like a lot of digital signage CMS companies have. I think they are sometimes called composer systems where you just open it up and you use templates that exist there, and you can adjust what's on them. This is developing templates within Adobe After Effects, usually, templates designed by motion graphics designers who know their way around AE. Then, that's where you plug in, right? Neb Savicic: Yes, exactly. One of our key selling points is that we are a native After Effects solution. So our users have to be After Effects users. That's why I'm saying they're in-house creative teams and agencies. So what this means is that we are not offering you boilerplate templates that are the same for everybody. You can actually create your own custom-branded bespoke templates that look awesome and then use our platform to increase the output of those templatized videos. So, what would the workflow be for? Let's use that example you had about QSR chains and wanting to have different menus based on weather conditions, geography, and that sort of thing. How does that work in the real world? Neb Savicic: Okay, so there are two ways you can achieve this. First of all, you can do what's called a batch renderer, which is very nicely demonstrated in a video we did for the SignageLive integration. Basically, what you do is upload your After Effects template into Plainly. You say, okay, we want to change the product's price, the product's name, and the product's image with every video. You create a big Google Sheet that's gonna have all of the different variations. You drop in that Google Sheet or a CSV into Plainly, click Render, and Plainly renders all of the different variations. That's the simple, no-code-needed way. The second way, which is a bit more advanced, is using our API. With our API, you can actually create any kind of workflow, and this is where we can also talk about programmatic. You can programmatically create video variations on demand. So let's say you have a system that detects it's rainy in New York, let's create a new content piece, that just pings our API and says create a new video, and we send you back the video so there are a couple of ways you can achieve the workflow, depending on the technical abilities. What's the timing and everything of that? If you hit “Batch render” or whatever the button is, you click it, does that take 10 seconds, 10 hours, or 10 days? Neb Savicic: You can see this on our YouTube channel. We actually made a video in which we rendered 1000 videos in 17 minutes so it's quite a fast system. Obviously, it depends on how complex the video template is, but it's quite fast, and it's quite capable of producing like we have customers doing tens of thousands of videos, like fifty thousand, a hundred thousand, so the core of our product is the scalable infrastructure that can output any number of videos. Are you using big, cloud-based compute systems, like AWS or whatever to do that, or is this your own iron? Neb Savicic: No, of course, we use Google for the rendering. So that gives you all the scalability you need. Neb Savicic: Yeah, of course. It's scalable on demand, and we don't have to worry about them shutting down. No, they're not anytime soon, at least. So what is the output file? Neb Savicic: It's a video, first of all, that's the big thing for digital signage. It's not an HTML5, it's a video. Neb Savicic: No. It's an actual video, MP4 or MOV. So that also has some benefits in terms of being able to play it on older screens and any kind of screen so that also has some benefits. So any media player, unless it's a complete piece of junk, supports playing out the video, whereas it might not play out HTML5. Neb Savicic: That's one of the benefits, yeah. Are there settings? If I say, “I want 720p, 1080p, 4K,” and “Here's the format: it's portrait or it's landscape,” can you munch on those things? Neb Savicic: Of course. So all of those things are actually handled in After Effects. So the customer decides what's the duration going to be, what's the dimension of the video going to be, what's the design, but then also some of the agencies we work with, they actually do stuff for broadcast. In those cases, they require very specific output parameters. Because of that, we have a feature where you can define these specific outputs, such as, if you want to change the bitrate, the FPS, or any of those more technical parameters. That's also possible after the video is rendered. If you do, use your example, a thousand videos in 17 minutes. For each of those videos, where do they go, and how do you distinguish which one is which? Can you give them names based on metadata so know this is Spanish, Escondido in California, postal code, and that sort of stuff? Neb Savicic: Yeah, of course. There are a couple of ways you can achieve this. One is naming the files. You can use the data parameters from the video. If you have a product name, and then you want also to add Spanish, you can name them. But in the case of the API usage, you can include the metadata in that API call, which will be how you distinguish those videos. But specifically for digital signage, and this is one of the things we did with SignageLive, so let's say in the spreadsheet you also have a column that says, where is this piece of content going to go? In SignageLive, it's called tags. You can actually use those tags and automatically distribute the videos to the screens with SignageLive because of their integration and the way we did it. But generally speaking, you can achieve that level of automation where you're dropping a CSV or filling out a Google sheet, the videos are read automatically, and they are distributed automatically to all of the screens where they need to be. I assume there are guardrails and checks and balances on this stuff. Automation is awesome, but it can work both ways. If somebody makes a mistake or something goes hairy and the rendered videos are incorrect in some way. How do you make sure that doesn't happen? Neb Savicic: So that's up to the user. We don't alter the data in any way. So what we get is what we put into the video, and then it's up to the user to introduce some checks and balances and security measures to make sure that the content looks right. So if there's an approval gateway of some kind that you want to look at each piece of video and go, okay, yeah, that looks right. That's up to the customer. That's not something inherent in your system? Neb Savicic: Yeah, of course, and we do it also for security reasons. Of course, we don't want to be liable for approving something and then making a mistake. So we leave that up to the user and ensure they have the flexibility to do it in the way they want. I think I saw in one of the demo videos that you do have or offer users the ability, at least at the creative stage, to do a draft render, look at it, and then go in and change some of the things, right? Neb Savicic: Yeah, of course. If you see a video that may be in, the data was incorrect. You can easily re-render that video, or, as you mentioned, use a draft version to make sure that it actually looks good before it's published. You're starting to work with AI, as everybody says they're working with AI, but how are you using it? Neb Savicic: So we are introducing AI into our tool to help our users do the tasks they always do with the assets outside of Plainly. So I'll give you an example. Let's say you have a product image. Those product images, in a lot of cases, have backgrounds, and in the video, you want to have an image without a background. So we are introducing features that will help you - we call it pre-processing - remove the background or denoise your audio, and do those things that really help make the lives of our users a bit easier. So they don't have to do things outside of Plainly. They can do everything in one place. It's very much what I hear from people talking about the coding side and using AI to remove or take away a lot of the grunt work. Neb Savicic: Exactly, and I think that's the right use case for AI. It's just that there are tons of tasks that people just don't want to do, and it's the same as with Plainly like nobody wants to change the text layer or the product name 10 times like you should use machines for that, and I think you should also use AI for those kinds of tasks where. It's so obvious that it's useful in that regard. So what about the idea of putting in a chat GPT prompt that says, “Make me a video for hamburgers that are $2.99. Sundays only”? Neb Savicic: That's a good idea, but it's not what we're trying to build, unfortunately. What's really interesting about Plainly, is that given that we are an API-first solution, we are very modular. We have clients that are actually doing a bunch of AI stuff before the assets go into Plainly. For example, we have one customer, at this point, multiple customers who are using AI avatars. So Plainly doesn't really add AI avatars. Still, since we have an API, they can quite easily bring our solutions together and have a solution that's creating an AI avatar. Then that video goes into plain to be included in the final video. If you want a ChatGPT prompt, you can just introduce ChatGPT before Plainly stringing them in a workflow and making any kind of workflow you want. I have some history with content automation and using After Effects templates, going back 10 years. The struggle I had was where it was a partnership. The big challenge I had was people didn't get it. They didn't understand the idea of templates and automation and making their lives easier. I'm guessing that it's much easier with this because you're not going to end users. You're not going to resellers or solutions providers. You're talking directly to the agencies by and large. Neb Savicic: Yeah, it's quite an obvious thing for them because it might seem tricky from the outside because, you could say oh, you are making Motion Designers obsolete. You're taking somebody's job that somebody changed names of the product there all day. But being a motion designer before Plainly, I don't look at it from that angle, I look from the angle of, you can have that Motion Designer to do a lot more work, different work, different creative work and use his or her time a lot more efficiently. Why do that menial work in that manner that's soul-sucking, when you can create different templates and different projects and that's what the agencies see. They see an opportunity for new revenue. Basically, they can take in more clients because they now have this tool that's going to help them output ten times more content than with the same amount of staff. Yeah. I was curious about that. I suspect there's a huge problem, it depends on its qualifier, but I'm curious how much time and money this can save. Neb Savicic: Depends... I'm kidding. I did some calculations, I was looking at some templates that are with our customers, and I was like, realistically, how much does it take to create ten videos from this template? And even if you have a fully templated project, you have all of the data ready to go, it can take anywhere between 10 and 30 minutes per video, depending on how complex it is. If you need to create ten videos, a hundred videos, thousand videos, you can see how that easily adds up where we clean with just literally one click. You add the CSV and can do thousands of these in 17 minutes. So the time savings are massive, but not easily counted. You cannot easily calculate it. At least some of it is owed to, it's the old phrase around garbage in, garbage out. If you don't tag everything properly in the After Effects file, automation is not as easy, right? Neb Savicic: Yes, of course. But it's not like you have to do some special work to prepare a template for Plainly. You just have to name your layers and things. Neb Savicic: Of course, every good Motion Designer or Video Editor will name their layers properly because otherwise, they won't find a way around their project if they return to it a month or six months later. Believe me, I've fallen into that trap. It's very hard. So you just have to be organized. You have to name this name stuff properly, and everything is going to work like with some other solutions on the markets they all say they're After Effects supported, but the reality is that yes, they support After Effects, but it's not natively. First of all, you must alter your creative process a lot, meaning you have to work with a plugin or some special effect to import After Effects into their platform. With Plainly, you're just working with After Effects. You put After Effects into Plainly, and it's going to work. So we don't alter your creative process in any way. We just empower you to create more videos. The other thing is that if you're not an After Effects native, that means that with a lot of solutions, you're actually turning After Effects into some intermediary format, which means that you cannot use all the effects or there is some quality loss that happens in that transition. So that's what our users love about Plainly. I would imagine this opens up the opportunity for a “boutique level” agency or creative shop to take on very large jobs at a scale that, in the past, they would go, “We would love to have this work, but it would kill us.” If they have this tool now, they can compete with the larger agencies, right? Neb Savicic: Exactly. Yes, and that's what I meant when I said it opens up new revenue opportunities because you can now take on more work, be a huge company, you can be outputting hundreds and hundreds of videos, even though it's… coming out of your spare bedroom. Neb Savicic: Yeah, out of the basement. How does pricing work? Neb Savicic: Oh, so it's a SaaS, which means you pay either monthly or annually for a subscription and that all depends on the number of minutes you export. It starts as low as $59 per month, but it can go higher if you need more minutes. So classic pricing tiers are based on the amount of work you do and the amount of output. Neb Savicic: Which makes sense. You charge on finished rendered videos, not on the draft, in terms of time? Neb Savicic: Yeah. We just look at the output, not what you're doing to plan on, just the output. You started this a couple of years ago, or three, four years ago? Neb Savicic: 2019. Okay. So five years ago, there were already some companies in the market doing maybe not the same work, but similar kinds of things. I did a podcast a few years back with Dataclay and I'm aware of SundaySky and some other ones out there. How do you compare to them, and when people say, okay, why would I use you versus brand X, what do you tell them? Neb Savicic: So there are a couple of things. First, if you compare Plainly to some other solutions, obviously being cloud-based, there is a difference to some of the other tools, like you don't have to worry about your rendering infrastructure because that's us. If something doesn't work, that's our fault. That's the core of our product. We ensure you can render as many videos as you want, as many videos as long as you have money. That's one thing, and then, of course, there are things like being After Effects native, where you can literally add any kind of template. We have had clients with amazing 3D-based templates that wouldn't be possible in other solutions, and then they were API-based. So a lot of our customers are actually building internal tools. They're actually integrating Plainly into their apps or internal tools for creative teams. So those three things are what separates us from the market. So for the big agencies with internal software developers, who would use the API, this is great. But for the smaller agencies or the purely creative agencies, they can go at it using the no-code side of it and not have to worry about APIs and things. Neb Savicic: Exactly. Yeah, that's it. Where are you guys at as a company? I saw that you got some seed funding from, what, the Serbian incubator fund or something? Neb Savicic: That was the first thing. That was in 2020, and then we got accepted into a very prestigious US accelerator called Tiny Seed. We were the first company from the Balkans to get in there. So they obviously saw something in us, but we were growing as a team, growing the customer base. We are so lucky to be working with some of the largest agencies and names that you would recognize from both Europe and the US, and we're just trying to make them happy and create a product that makes their lives better. I realized you're serving a whole bunch of different vertical markets and use cases, digital signage, just being one of them is, that a substantial noticeable or a friend of mine uses the term consequential part of your business or kind of an interesting sort of side aspect to what you do. Neb Savicic: I'm not sure how big digital signage is with our agency customers. I would imagine that a good portion of the content they do is for digital signage, but as for us working directly with digital signage companies, we're just getting into that industry. With the SignageLive integration, we might announce more integrations soon. That's a new industry for us. We see that there are a lot of benefits for the users in the digital signage industry we're just trying to get into. We chatted at the digital signage summit in Munich. So, obviously, you were there to network and meet some people, and I had some beers. Would you also be at ISE? Neb Savicic: Yes, of course, and then Munich next year and possibly Intelcom. I assume this product will always evolve. Over the next year, are there new wrinkles you'll be rolling out that you can tell me about without alerting your competitors? Neb Savicic: Honestly, the good thing is that I'm so happy to have a technical team that's really fast, and the product improvement cycle is insane. We are putting out new features on a bi-monthly basis. So I don't know. One year from here, who knows what will be added? Definitely, the AI features are greater than everybody. So all the normal stuff: faster, better, easier. Neb Savicic: Exactly. The stuff that doesn't change. Yes. All right, Neb. That was great. Very interesting. Thank you. Neb Savicic: Yeah. Thank you too, Dave.
Today we chat up Brian Maffitt, who has a prolific background in VFX, Post Production and a myriad of other under-the-hood experiences in the entertainment industry. Brian is the Visual Effects Supervisor and Technical Director at Late Night Cartoons, the NY-based animation studio that produced Our Cartoon President, Tooning Out the News and many animated specials for The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Films include In and Of Itself, The Blind Date and Family of the Sun. He was founder and Creative Director of Total Training from 1997 through 2014, producing and presenting thousands of hours of educational content. He also designed the Evolution plugins for Adobe After Effects, which were acquired by Adobe and have been part of AE since 2000. @BMaffitt
Hundreds of Beavers is a callback to slapstick comedies like classic WB Looney Tunes cartoons. It's full of live-action wacky pratfalls, ridiculous situations, and a healthy dose of beaver-related mayhem. Shot on a micro-budget of $150,000, Hundreds of Beavers was made with passion, creativity, and a whole lot of beaver costumes. Director Mike Cheslik and cinematographer Quinn Hester and most of the cast and crew are all from Wisconsin, where Hundreds of Beavers was shot. Everyone was comfortable with snow, loved physical comedy, and had the desire to make a film that would stand out as a true indie. After first meeting at the Milwaukee Film Festival in 2018, Mike called Quinn in October, 2020 to ask if he'd DP the film during the winter in zero degree weather. “It couldn't have been anybody but Quinn because he's just a tough guy and he's used to the winter,” says Mike. In total, the film took about 8 weeks of shooting with a core crew of about 4-6 people over the course of two winters. The main location was a remote cabin in Northern Wisconsin. “We're out there in the elements. It's very rare to be on a production where you are not only making a movie and having to use all your energy, focus and creativity and meditate on how to accomplish certain looks and goals and shots,” says Quinn. “But you're also trying to not die. All of us almost died at least once.” To make Hundreds of Beavers, Mike spent years creating extensive storyboards and animatics. “People could watch the animatic on the DIT computer and they could also see the boards in my binders that I was carrying around,” he says.”But it still takes a lot of explaining and there's a lot to wrap your head around because there's so much in this movie. It is a lot. I was just thinking about it nonstop for years. And then just doing my best to explain it to the team. I was always surprised how much trust we got.” The film is very effects-heavy and made to look old-timey in grainy black and white. “The freedom of picking a grainy black and white style, it frees you up to tell a bigger story and to have bigger visual ideas. This style gave us permission to work that way in the modern day,” says Mike. Since they were shooting in the winter, they would have to wrap by 4:30 pm. Mike imported everything into Adobe After Effects and edited with Adobe Premiere every night. That way, Quinn and the crew knew exactly what they needed by the next day. Quinn shot on a Panasonic LUMIX GH5 camera that worked well even in extremely cold weather. All the footage could easily be imported into Adobe Premiere and After Effects. Hundreds of Beavers is still playing in select theaters and is tons of fun to see with a live audience. Go to the Hundreds of Beavers website to find cities where it's playing. https://www.hundredsofbeavers.com/ Hundreds of Beavers is also available to rent on Amazon and Apple. Find Mike Cheslik: Instagram @mikeches Find Quinn Hester: Instagram @quinn.hester Sponsored by Hot Rod Cameras www.hotrodcameras.com The Cinematography Podcast website: www.camnoir.com Facebook: @cinepod Instagram: @thecinepod Twitter: @ShortEndz
In this episode, we dive into the digital revolution of learning, showcasing the best online courses and resources that are reshaping how designers and motion artists sharpen their skills. From the basics of character design to advanced techniques in Cinema 4D and Houdini, join us as we explore courses that cater to every level of expertise. We also explore interjecting your personality into your work, Generalists vs Specialists, and more! SHOW NOTES: Monday Meeting Patreon Monday Meeting Discord Camp Mograph Australia Camp Mograph USA Character Design Fundamentals at School of Motion Rive Interactive Motion Era at Motion Design School Level Up Course at School of Motion Effectatron C4D Redshift Course Tim Clapham's LEARN C4D IN A DAY Paul Esteves on YouTube Motion Magic Rive Class Brads Art School on YouTube Lights, Camera, Render at School of Motion Producer Classes at Deducers Shea Lord's Courses Abeleal 3D Full Harbor Thrivecart Texturing in Adobe After Effects on Skillshare Ordinary Folk's Free Projects Ravie's AE Files School of Motion Holdframe Motion Punk on Patreon Blink My Brain Digital on Gumroad We Are Playgrounds Replay Motion Plus Design Watch Talks UE5 Automotive at Allan Portilho Academy Austin Taylor on LinkedIn Full Harbor Plus 25K Division 05 Tutorials PJ Richardson on LinkedIn Discord Invite Link Merkvilson on YouTube Airen 4D, AI Render Engine for Cinema 4D AI in European Union Regulations Karen X Cheng on Instagram Hirokazu Yokohara on Instagram Vallee Duhamel on Instagram JunkboxAI Post on Instagram
This chat features director, story artist, writer, and animator Keith Pakiz, who moved from Cleveland to Los Angeles in pursuit of animation. Since then he's worked on many shows like Costume Quest, Tiny Toons Looniversity, ThunderCats Roar, and Aquaman: King of Atlantis. In their chat, Pakiz shares how he moved up to animation director and gives tips for others to follow a similar path. Tune in to Ibele and Pakiz to hear: *Why you shouldn't apply to online animation jobs (and what to do instead) *How career stability changes once you become a director *The pros and cons of developing a personal animation style ~[SPONSORED MESSAGE]~ This video is sponsored by Mt. Mograph - learn more about their software at mtmo.co/. For over 10 years Mt. Mograph has powered up animators and motion designers with industry leading plugins and software. Mt. Mograph offers an unrivaled Lifetime License that will leave you speechless — with constant updates and next-generation tools to improve your workflow. Like, Boombox their all-in-one sound design toolkit; of over 14,000 commercial-grade sound effects, Wander their ultimate media collection engine, or the legendary Motion-4 known as “the most helpful Extension for motion designers in Adobe After Effects” a tour de' force of tools and controls for professional animators, brands, studios and creators since 2013. Use special code “AIP” at Checkout for 20% off your Lifetime License. ~~ Social Links: *Check out Pakiz's website: https://keithpakiz.com/ *Follow Pakiz on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/k_pakiz/?hl=en *Follow Pakiz on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@mooncountyanm
This chat features animator and story artist Austin Pettit who shares his journey of moving to LA in search of animated TV work. However, once in LA, he ended up getting most of his work from YouTubers like Game Grumps, NOXP, Cas van de Pol, and GingerPale. In his chat, Pettit sheds light into how the YouTuber animation industry works and how others can find work there too. Tune in to Ibele and Pettit to hear: *The best way to connect with YouTubers who hire animators *How stable a YouTube animation career is vs television *The unique working environment YouTube animation creates that television studios can't often match ~[SPONSORED MESSAGE]~ This video is sponsored by Mt. Mograph - learn more about their software at https://mtmo.co/. For over 10 years Mt. Mograph has powered up animators and motion designers with industry leading plugins and software. Mt. Mograph offers an unrivaled Lifetime License that will leave you speechless — with constant updates and next-generation tools to improve your workflow. Like, Boombox their all-in-one sound design toolkit; of over 14,000 commercial-grade sound effects, Wander their ultimate media collection engine, or the legendary Motion-4 known as “the most helpful Extension for motion designers in Adobe After Effects” a tour de' force of tools and controls for professional animators, brands, studios and creators since 2013. Use special code “AIP” at Checkout for 20% off your Lifetime License. ~~ Social Links: *Follow Pettit on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/austinpettit/ *Check out Pettit's website: https://www.austinpettitart.com/
Welcome to another episode of The Content Capitalists Podcast!Today, we have a veteran expert at creating video ads as our guest—Kevin Anson!With 19 years of experience under his belt, he's collaborated with Fortune 500 names, producing thousands of videos and ads that have made millions for businesses.As a well-known video ad consultant, agency owner, and online instructor, Kevin is also an expert in Adobe Premiere and Adobe After Effects.In this incredible episode, he reveals a few specific tips and techniques to boost your business growth!Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe to The Content Capitalists Podcast for more inspiring interviews and content creation strategies.Find Kevin Anson at: https://www.facebook.com/kevinanson https://www.kevinanson.com https://tiktok.com/@kevin.anson kevin@kevinanson.com https://facebook.com/kevinanson https://youtube.com/kevinanson https://twitter.com/kevinanson https://www.instagram.com/kevinansonFollow Ken Okazaki at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/influencervideo https://www.instagram.com/kenokazaki https://www.youtube.com/c/KenOkazaki Ken Okazaki Google Podcast Ken Okazaki @ Spotify Ken Okazaki @ Apple Content Capitalists YouTube
Welcome to a special rerun edition of the YoungBloodPodcast!
In this episode Nick talks about the reason why he loves YouTube for your church in 2023. How to get started for less than $1,000, and how to utilize your videos for digital and in-person. It's the perfect Hybrid strategy for churches in 2023. TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@clasonnick Watch this Episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9pjecCnd8FVFCenWharf2g Full Transcript and Links at: http://www.hybridministry.xyz/033 FREE E-Book: https://www.hybridministry.xyz/articles/ebook TIMECODES 00:00-01:46 Intro 01:46-08:50 Don't Sleep on YouTube 08:50-12:26 Recommended YouTube Strategy in 2023 12:26-16:45 Editing your YouTube Video 16:45-18:04 2023 Church YouTube Channel Gear Starter Kit 18:04-21:00 Turning your long-form content into social clips 21:00- 22:18 Turning viewers of Shorts into Subscribers and viewers of longer form videos 22:18-24:45 Utilizing YouTube videos for Hybrid Ministry 24:45-26:05 The added benefit of Pre-Filming 26:05-27:53 Outro GEAR LINKS Microphones: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0B8RFV5GR/ref=ppxyodtbasintitleo00s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09SVVJQBS/ref=ppxyodtbasintitleo01s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Tripods: https://www.amazon.com/MT-16-Extendable-Adjustment-Lightweight-Portable/dp/B08LGGXH1J/ref=sr13?crid=1TDQYAVZ9MDJE&keywords=desk+tripod&qid=1676478938&sprefix=desk+tripod%2Caps%2C176&sr=8-3 https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B083J6D5ZK/ref=ppxyodtbasintitleo00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Ring Light: https://www.amazon.com/Holders-Stepless-Dimmable-YouTube-Photography/dp/B08JPCSDMP/ref=sr13?crid=36WSGU8GCX1U2&keywords=ring+light&qid=1676478960&sprefix=ring+light%2Caps%2C121&sr=8-3 TRANSCRIPT Nick Clason (00:02): Well, what is up everybody? Welcome back to another episode and YouTube video of the Hybrid Minister Show. Hop in the show notes to subscribe or check out the other platform. If you're not on YouTube or if you're not listening on a podcast. Excited to be with you today. My name is Nick Clason, and I, as always am your host. You know what we are going to be talking about today? Do not sleep on YouTube. We're gonna dive into that in just a minute. But before we do, make sure you hit the show notes hybridministry.xyz, episode 33. So at http://www.hybridministry.xyz/033 for all the show notes, especially in this episode, I'm gonna share some actual product links to some things that we're using. I'm not an affiliate or anything like that, but just, this is what we've done. This is what we've used, so make sure you go check that out as well as if you have not head to the, have I already ruined my church's TikTok account, A complete guide to posting a TikTok from Scratch. Nick Clason (01:09): And the reason I made this is because I want this to be a guide for anybody who's never even opened the TikTok app to a first be able to shoot and edit a TikTok, but then be able to cross post it to all the different platforms. Um, so go and check that out. That's a free gift from us to you. Hit the link in the show notes for that. Alright, everyone, glad to have you. Thanks for being here. If you're on YouTube, hit that subscribe and bell button. If you're on podcast, I'd love, we'd love to also ask you to hit that subscribe button. But let's dive into, don't Sleep on YouTube, episode 33. Here we go. Well, hey there everybody, and, uh, in this episode, like I said, I want to talk about Don't sleep on YouTube. Now, what does that mean? I think, um, at least in my sphere or whatever, like I think YouTube is like a little bit the forgotten child of social media. Nick Clason (02:05): I was talking on the phone this week to my brother, um, who's just getting started at a church and just getting started on his social media accounts. And he's like, so should we do TikTok? And I was like, yeah, for sure, but he is a youth pastor. Should we do Instagram? Like, yeah, yeah, you can do Instagram. Um, anything else is like YouTube. And he's like, YouTube, really? And I was like, yeah, YouTube, uh, here's why. YouTube is the either second or third, depending on how you look at it. Largest search engine. So, I mean, if, if it's not second, uh, behind Google, the argument is that it is third behind Google, Google Images, and then, uh, YouTube is third. And so, um, also YouTube is owned by Google. And so, um, all three of those are owned, you know, by the same person people place. Nick Clason (02:53): And so the search engine is going to, um, be tied to a Google, uh, a strength of a Google type search engine. So it's, it's not going to be a small bananas like TikTok is trying to, uh, acutely turn themselves into more of a search engine type platform. And like, that's fine, but it's not powered by Google. You know what I mean? It's powered by by TikTok. And so TikTok was good at making vertical viral style videos. YouTube is owned by the largest, best and most powerful search engine in the entire world. So YouTube has some strength and some weight behind it. In addition to that, uh, YouTube has recently, um, burst onto the scene with shorts. I don't know the last time you logged into your mobile app on YouTube, but there'll be a couple of widescreen long form classic YouTube video recommendations, um, in one, two, or three of the first spots. Nick Clason (03:52): But then right beneath that is a list of shorts. It's similar to the Instagram app. Now if you're scrolling through all the square pictures, but then it'll suggest some reels. That's what YouTube is now doing with shorts. And about a year or so ago, I, um, I gave up on YouTube shorts cuz I posted a few and they got like one or two likes and or views, like just, it was useless. And, uh, it was the clunkiest between TikTok, Facebook and Instagram and YouTube. Of those four, it was the Clunkiest, uh, to post of all of them. And also it has the shortest window for shorts. So like TikTok now, um, will offer like an up to three minute video. And for some people creators or something, I'm not sure who gets this. Um, some people can post up to like 10 minute videos. So Rios has now got a longer length on Instagram. Nick Clason (04:44): However, on Facebook it's shorter, which doesn't make any sense why like those two who are both owned by Meta wouldn't communicate and talk to themselves. Uh, YouTube still only has a one minute, um, clip option. So anytime I'm making any sort of vertical video content, if I want to post it to YouTube, I need to ensure that it's a minute or less. Um, but that's usually not that hard. Um, and so like even yesterday I posted on our, um, TikTok, we did one of those blind rankings. I had, uh, a girl, um, who's one of our worship leaders at our church that leads a lot in our ministry. I had her do a blind ranking of NFL teams based only on the logo. Cause she doesn't know anything about sports. And, uh, I'm dating myself a little bit, but we posted that on Super Bowl Sunday thinking that'd be, you know, like a funny thing to kind of play off of like the Super Bowl thing, vibe or whatever. Nick Clason (05:35): Um, and when she recorded it on TikTok, she recorded it for like a minute and 30 seconds. So I had to go and I had to cut it and shave it down. I did that all in the TikTok app. Um, but then when I was able to then take that link and post it on YouTube, it was less than a minute. So I was able to go on YouTube shorts and I had a decision moment there. Do I just post this on, um, TikTok and Instagram reels or do I do the work, cut it, chop it down to be able to get it over to, to YouTube. Here's the interesting thing about that particular video, you never know because especially when you're posting the four platforms, one might like blow up on one and get like one view over on another platform, but in this case, that video performed best on YouTube, believe it or not. Nick Clason (06:20): And so from about a year ago when I first started, um, posting on YouTube, they are much more, uh, they've done a lot more work, I think, on their backend to make shorts a little bit more viable. When I first started posting shorts on our churches student ministry YouTube page, we didn't do that until the very first of this year. We were changing our name in 2023. And so I already had the YouTube channel for Cross Creek students. Um, and I didn't want to start a YouTube channel for first Colville students and switch them over. I just, I wanted to get a clean start from everything, logo, handle, the whole thing. Cuz YouTube's the one i, I know the the least, right? I didn't want any issues. And honestly, even like right now, our TikTok is still under at first Colville students because TikTok holds, um, those names longer, um, to let them become available. Nick Clason (07:14): I, I already had a Cross Creek students account on TikTok. I owned it. Um, and I deleted it hoping that within 30 days they would give it to me part, not hoping only for hop's sake, but also because that's what they said that they would do. But then when I did more research, if someone deletes their account, they hold it for four months until it becomes available again. Or at least that's what someone said on Reddit somewhere. So we're gonna see, um, one day we'll change that over. But nonetheless, I digress. I didn't start posting on YouTube until January 1st, 2023, uh, because of the name change thing. And it is now, again, dating myself when this was, uh, recorded versus when it's gonna be aired live. But it's February 13th and we have over 70 subscribers on YouTube. We post a once weekly long form video clip. Nick Clason (08:04): Um, and so we have maybe 10, I wanna say something like that. Um, long form longer than 10 minute video clips. Um, the rest we just post are normal three day, three a day, um, short form video content that we also posted, TikTok that we also posted to reels we posted over on YouTube. And we have over 70 subscribers that is easily the fastest growing social media platform of all the other platforms that we're using. Um, we are reaching new and different people on YouTube than we are on TikTok than we are on Instagram. TikTok is probably the second fastest growing. Um, and by far the slowest are Instagram and Facebook. They're just, they're not there yet. So what do we do on YouTube? What is my recommended YouTube strategy? Now and foremost, if you're a church and you're already using YouTube as a container or a holder or a storage platform for your live stream Sunday sermon, uh, Sunday services, uh, that's great. Nick Clason (09:07): I would recommend continuing to do that. If you're just getting started and you don't have the money or the gear or the infrastructure or the desire or the know-how, or whatever other myriad of reasons why it might be difficult for you to get your service up onto YouTube, then here's what I recommend. Pre film your messages sitting down in front of a camera, very similar to what I'm doing right here. For those of you who are not subscribed to our YouTube channel, we're watching it there. What I am doing now, sitting in front of a camera, talking directly into it, pre film your content, why I talked about this in previous episodes, and so I'll, I'll ensure that I go link to that. I think it was in like a three part episode, so it'll be behind some other stuff, but I'll link to it. Nick Clason (09:51): Um, YouTube indexes videos that, uh, and and videos that perform the best are those videos that are between, uh, 12 minutes and 17 minutes. Um, a Sunday sermon, typically 30 to 45 minutes, um, somewhere in that range. And if you're including the worship and the announcements and all the other stuff, you're church service is probably somewhere between an hour and an hour and a half. Um, and YouTube measures and tracks watch time and retention rates and drop off rates. And so the longer your video, that's, that's good. Okay? It's good to have a long video, but if people aren't staying for the whole video, it's gonna actually be a ding against you. The other thing that you get to do with, um, a pre-filed message, uh, is that you get to, you get to make it accustom and, and tailor the message for people online only you all know, and you've all been there, especially as we've moved from Covid d whereas like digital only into back to in person. Nick Clason (10:56): You've all probably noticed and known the hybrid struggle that there's been where you're talking to, you know, during Covid, you're talking directly to a camera that worked really well, but then you're talking to a room and also some people behind the camera, and now you're probably talking to a room and less people behind the camera. And so when you pre-filed, you're able to talk directly to the people that you know that are gonna be watching and consuming this on YouTube with your in-person sort of being the secondary or sitting in the back seat of the purpose of that, that video, right? And so, uh, YouTube, you guys know this. You've watched it before. They even like probably make fun of it or make memes out of it, right? But the whole thanks for being here, watch it like it subscribe, make sure you hit that bell. Nick Clason (11:40): You can do all of those things when you prefill the message. Why do we do those things? Why do YouTubers do those things? Because they actually work. Believe it or not. Uh, if you just watch a video or someone just as a video versus if you tell them to and subscribe, like comment below, you'll actually see a, a noticeable uptick in those things happening if you just ask them to do it. And so that's one of the advantages of sitting down pre-filing your message. You can make it shorter. Uh, you can make it fit into what's preferred for YouTube. You can speak directly to an online audience, someone that you know is going to be consuming your message in an online forum, an online first type forum. And you can, uh, tailor your message in that that way. All right, so let's get nitty gritty. Nick Clason (12:28): So what do I do? What do I use? Uh, so for phones, believe it or not, I'm an Android guy. Um, and so I am filming this video and, and, um, I film all of my other, uh, videos that I pre-filed people with on a Google Pixel Pro seven. That's the one that they, uh, you know, put on, you know, commercials and stuff where you can do the magic eraser, take people out of the background, stuff like that. I tried that last night actually for the very first time I was watching the Super Bowl and they're advertising for it. And I was like, oh yeah, I have that phone. Let me see if I can actually do that. And so I did. Um, but the camera is top of the line for cell phone cameras. Um, it's, it's not a camera camera, right? Um, and so it's, it's got its limitations for sure. Nick Clason (13:14): Uh, but it's the phone I also use for my personal use. And so because I use it for my personal use and I use it for my, uh, filming and stuff, I, I invested in it personally so that I can use it for things both at work and stuff like this I'm using for the podcast or whatever. So I just use my cell phone for church has, um, a budget and they're not willing or able or whatever to invest in livestream. Look no further than the camera in your pocket. It is probably better than most, uh, most like most cameras that we had access to even like five years ago. It's crazy. So what do I do after I film it? Well, I use the Adobe Suite Creative Cloud. My church, uh, pays for that. It's like $55 a month. Um, I think for a business license, and let me just say, I think it's worth it. Nick Clason (14:04): There are other free programs and you can nickel and dime your way away from those things, but for like editing purposes, it's really helpful and useful. Now, most computer softwares have a free video editing, um, service and you, you can get by with some stuff. Uh, but they're just like, all those free, all those free things are all those things that are not like a part of the, you know, like industry standard. They're just, they're gonna have shortcomings and they're gonna have things that you wish they had that they don't have, or services that they offer that they just aren't able to offer because they're not free. I always think about the time, one of the churches I worked at that I got, I got really into design, um, and like making graphics. That was like one of the things I, I kind of became the Sunday morning slide graphic maker. Nick Clason (14:50): Um, and I, I learned how to do all of that in PowerPoint, but then there were just shortcomings. Like I, for example, I couldn't make a round background with transparent outlines around it. Why? Because that's a Photoshop thing, right? And there's some free programs out there that do it. And now even with things like Canva and whatnot, um, that are even much more prominent than when I started doing it. But I remember asking my, my boss to ask the finance committee if we could please spring for the Adobe Creative Cloud, um, Adobe Creative Suite. Um, and he just, he was unwilling to pay the money at the time. And so I was doing a lot of things, but I just, I, there was always limits to what I could do in PowerPoint versus in Photoshop. And so that's what I'll say, yes, you can, Jimmy Rig and Jerry rigger way around a lot of things. Nick Clason (15:40): But, um, and sim this is the same conversation by the way we're just having with the camera. Like my cell phone does a fine job, but like, there are still limitations to it. And so there's always a, an upgrade that you can always make. So you just gotta figure out where and how you wanna spend the money. And so, um, we use Adobe Creative, the Adobe Creative Suite in many more facets and, and you know, places than just, uh, for YouTube videos. But I use Adobe Premiere Pro because it, it links really well with the Adobe Photoshop in Adobe After Effects. Um, and I don't use After Effects for every edit. I use it for like, some initial things for some lower thirds and some animated graphics and stuff like that, that I just store and have and put, you know, places when I'm editing. Nick Clason (16:27): Um, so I'll, I'll use it like for the first time or for the first few videos to get a a, a library of some things. But for the most part, when I'm editing, I'm just using Adobe Premier, um, pro and Adobe Photoshop. And they, they talk really well together cuz they're both in the same creative cloud. So what did I get? So in addition to my phone, I have like a ring light. Um, I, I bought a tripod, a desk tripod as well as a full standing tripod. Um, and I bought two style microphones. I bought two lapels that connect via Bluetooth. They just plug right into my phone. Um, and I bought a shotgun style microphone that plugs into like the charging port of my phone. And I'll tell you what, what I'll do is I will throw all of those links into the show notes. Nick Clason (17:16): Now, keep in mind they are for, um, like Android connections and so if, if you don't have one of those and you have an iPhone or whatever, there are all the same things for iPhones as well. So you can see what I got and you can then, uh, take that and, uh, adjust your recommendation toward, uh, an iPhone thing. And so that microphone, uh, is probably the best investment, I would say of all the things. It just, it has really good quality, it's really easy to use. Um, and it just makes the video sound just a little bit better and a little bit more professional using the microphone. That way it's, it's not a microphone like this, uh, like this podcast mic that I have for those of you watching, um, it plugs directly into my phone and I can shoot it right at whoever, um, is looking at my phone or at the camera. Nick Clason (18:05): All right, so then how do I use, uh, then how do I use that strategy for social? So when I'm editing in Adobe Premiere Pro, um, I find two spots to create just vertical video message clips. Um, I clip 'em out. I, I try to find a good hook. If the person, myself or any of our other, uh, people on our team don't have a good hook, I will have them talk for a little bit, pause and I'll fly in some text and I'll do an AI voiceover. Um, and the place that I've been using for that AI voiceover is, um, a place called V V E E V E E d.io, uh, v and also I'll drop that in the show notes as well. Um, and I, all those AI ones similar to what I was saying earlier, uh, they, they require a payment, right? Nick Clason (18:56): They require you, like you can get one, but then you gotta start paying if you want more than one per one per week or something like that. I can't remember. Uh, but v do IO so far has been working well, I'm gonna anticipate it one day, it's not gonna work, and I'm gonna have to pay for an AI voice generator. Um, and that's just that classic, like, that's really popular on TikTok right now. I don't know how long that will be, but for right now, that works well as a hook. So like, I might be talking pause, AI voice come in, and then it keeps, uh, and then it plays the rest of the thing and the AI voice works as a hook. And then the rest of the video in under 60 seconds hopefully delivers when you're editing an Adobe Premier Pro, you can create an in and an out by just clicking the I while you're in your sequence and an o for I in and o for out. Nick Clason (19:44): And then you can just render that out, um, just that little section. So in that little section, I'll chop it up real a lot. You know, like, I'll make it real quick. Jump cuts, I'll zoom in, zoom out, like for emphasis and whatnot, I'm able to add captions directly in Adobe Premier Pro, um, and, and use it that way. So, uh, that I will chop that up. I'll chop up two of those, and then I'll also do one of those videos I've talked about and, um, with just like stock motion video background in the background, um, motion video background thing with like a tweet tweet looking screenshot over top of it as, as like a quote from the message or a bottom line. And so I'll, I'll use three different sermon style clips, um, sprinkled in and woven in through our social media throughout the week. Nick Clason (20:32): So like, we meet on Wednesday nights. So I have one that goes live on Thursday morning from the pre-recorded YouTube video content. I have one that goes on Sunday morning. I usually do that as like the, the quote post. And then I have one that goes on Tuesday, uh, the day before next message would be preached, or our video goes live in the room on a Wednesday night. So that is my, that's how I use my social media strategy. Um, and how I weave that into our schedule. On the end of those social media videos, I use just a YouTube subscribe ender screen. And so this is probably my favorite part is because we pre-filed and have longer form, uh, YouTube messages, if someone does in a discoverability algorithm stumble across our message, it will then, uh, fade to a screen that says, watch the full message on YouTube. Nick Clason (21:24): I like that because I think that when there is an actual like strategy or place to push people to, if they do discover you, um, we talked about it in the vi in the u in the podcast last week that a lot of Gen Z more than more than 50% say they use short form platforms to find short form videos of things that they may want to watch longer form of later. And so, uh, I use that and say, Hey, go watch the full message over on YouTube, then go click the link link bio, you know, something like that, uh, to take them to the full message of the short clip that they just watched. And so that's one of the ways that it's not just about going viral, it's not just about vanity metrics. It's not just about getting a lot of views, but it's hopefully about taking people from an awareness of us to consuming some more messages of us or that we are able to produce. Nick Clason (22:19): Now, this is my favorite part because our podcast is called Hybrid Ministry, but what are ways that we use this in a hybrid style? So I say we pre-record, um, and so we do a message on Wednesday Night Live. We pre-record it, um, post it on YouTube when we meet on Sunday mornings, uh, well actually first when we meet on Wednesday nights, we provide a you version live events, uh, event on, on their phones so they can navigate and interact in you version that can take notes, they can read the, the scripture, they can follow along with the outline basically. But then at the end of it, you can push and produce some external links. So a lot of times I will link to a short, a YouTube short, um, or a long form YouTube video that relates to the topic that we're teaching with. Nick Clason (23:07): So that's a way that something that we're do, that someone's experiencing in the room, they can experience a hybrid relationship with us, with our social media, with our platforms, um, through that YouVersion events. The other thing that we do is on Sunday mornings, um, our students all come in for a big into the auditorium for a big look announcement time, real quick, five, 10 minutes, not, not much longer. And then we break them out into the small groups all throughout the building. Um, what we're able to do, because our Sunday morning small group ties to our Wednesday night message is now that we're pre-filing, I've been pulling a minute or two clip from the message, um, and playing it. And so like I've told you before, we have a team of three. And so oftentimes whoever is teaching on Wednesday is not the person doing announcements or, or hosting the room on Sunday morning. Nick Clason (24:01): Um, and so, and like yesterday, uh, my boss, he preached on Wednesday and we played his clip and he's on vacation, but he was still able to, you know, uh, tee up the morning and, and still give a moment of spiritual influence to the entire room because we're using this message, uh, that we've already, we already have in the can. We already pre-filed it, it already exists somewhere. So for those kids who don't get, don't come on Wednesday and don't get to hear him speak ever, um, it's an opportunity to to introduce them to him, to introduce him to, to introduce them to his style, for them to hear from him. Not just in giving announcements, but also in giving the actual message content. Finally, my favorite reason for not sleeping on YouTube and the added benefit of pre-filing is it gets you into your content sooner and it gives you, uh, just an opportunity to prep, um, before you're gonna take it live to your room before you're gonna stand up and preach it. Nick Clason (25:04): And so I think it's valuable that you're not flying in hot on a Wednesday, having, uh, just printed something from a pre-canned curriculum and then just grabbing the outline notes. I think it's good to have ingested it, digested it, um, wrestled with it, interacted with it, and so then by the time you get up there, you're more familiar with it, it's gonna probably be delivered much more naturally because you have a familiarity with your outline and with your message as opposed to just you seeing it now for the first time. And doing it this way, we've pre-filed our messages on the Thursday before they're preached. And so our people are interacting with the message, um, the whole week before they even get up and preach live. And so by the time they get up there, it's gonna be locked in, in their brains and their hearts, hopefully at a lot better level, uh, just by the forced nature of needing to be ready to pre film their YouTube content. Nick Clason (26:05): Well, hey everyone, I am thrilled that you stuck around to the end. Thanks so much for hanging out. Uh, if you found this helpful, please share it, rate it, drop a like, uh, all kinds of stuff. All those things help us do better indexing on YouTube in the podcast algorithms and whatever and whatnot. Uh, and so that would be greatly appreciated out of us as a token of our appreciation, we have created a couple of free resources for you. So if you head to the link in the show notes and go grab the, uh, TikTok, uh, have I ruined my TikTok account for doing that. We will also throw in our completely free social media checklist, what you need to be asking yourself every time you post to every platform. Um, but what we don't have on that one is YouTube. You know why? Because when I created it, I was sleeping on YouTube. Nick Clason (26:53): Don't sleep on YouTube. It's gonna be helpful, beneficial, it's the largest search engine of all the social medias that we have out there. And it is, it is worth investing in. So regardless of where your church is big, small, have a lot of money, have a lot of gear, don't like, there is a way to make it happen. So I would recommend getting in there, create it, make it hybrid. There are more ways to flush even that hybridization out. But for now, go back and listen to everything I just said for what we're doing to live and lean into a hybrid, digital, physical environment to help point our students closer to Jesus. Again, thanks so much for hanging out. Uh, follow me on, uh, TikTok, follow me on YouTube, uh, subscribe to this podcast and we will be sure to talk next time. Don't forget, stay hybrid.
2nd January - A day in fiddling with Adobe After Effects. Feel free to join in using: #aliens&alcoholicsMuch love and gratitude, Belle x#comedystore #csplayers #adobeaftereffects
Mark Schwab is a writer, director, producer, actor and film maker. He is the owner of DITR Films and creator of the award winning film "Brotherly Lies" Along with Co-Owner, Mark Balunis, they've had a thirty-five year road of Super8mm filming, 16mm filming, MiniDV tape, RED cameras, SONY cameras and BlackMagic cameras. It's been location shooting, digital assets, Adobe Premiere, Adobe After Effects, Final Cut Pro and DaVinci Resolve. It's been film festivals, road trips to Los Angeles, taking questions from audiences and accepting awards.Diamond in the Rough Films can take any project from concept through deliverables. They pride themselves on being that one-stop-shop for independent filmmaking.Brotherly Lies is a film where the viewer can be taken in by the characters and wonder how it'll get resolved. It is what movies used to be; transporting you for 90 minutes into a world that isn't your own. It's a love story, a mystery and a human story that almost all of us can relate to.It's a movie where you can turn down the lights, have a glass of wine and put your arm around someone you deeply care about — never taking the experience for granted as it all unfolds.I loved having this conversation with you Mark and welcome to the Hey Gurl family! You are welcome back on the show anytime!!! I had such a wonderful time. Follow Mark:Instagram: @ditrfilms Website: https://ditrfilms.comBrotherly Lies on Fearless: https://watch.fearless.li/programs/brotherly-lies Bill Janisse Instagram: @billjanisseBill FB: @billjanisse Hey Gurl! Instagram: @heygurl.podcastHey Gurl! FB: @heygurlpodcast Hey Gurl! Tik Tok: @heygurlpodcastHey Gurl! Website: www.heygurlpodcast.com Hey Gurl! YouTube: Here
The founder and CEO of Sharpcut Productions and you may also know him as DJ Sharpcut Mr. Gary Robinson stops by and shares his advice with those comedian's out there desiring to break into the ever so difficult world of comedy. He also shares his experience of what it's like working alongside Jim Carrey. What is Sharpcut Productions? Sharpcut Productions has been creating award-winning video productions in Los Angeles since 1992. Our work has been seen by hundreds of millions of people in multiple countries. Our tools of choice are Avid Media Composer and Avid Pro Tools, Magix Vegas Pro, Blackmagic Fusion, Arriflex 35mm cameras, Sony and JVC 4k cameras, Adobe After Effects, and Newtek's Lightwave 3d. We can scale to create outstanding video productions of all types. Our productions have been awarded Communicator Awards, Telly Awards, Videographer Awards, an Omni Intermedia Award, an Aurora Award, and an Emmy Nomination. For more info visit www.sharpcutproductions.com Follow Gary Robinson on Instagram @sharpcutproductions
In this episode, Bryce and Conor interview special guest Tony Van Eerd!TwitterADSP: The PodcastConor HoekstraBryce Adelstein LelbachAbout the Guest:Tony Van Eerd has been coding for well over 25 years, and hopefully coding well for most of that. Previously at Inscriber, Adobe, and BlackBerry, he now enables painting with light at Christie Digital. He is on the C++ Committee. He is a Ninja and a Jedi.Show NotesDate Recorded: 2022-06-24Date Released: 2022-07-01CppNorth ConferenceInscriberBlackBerryAdobeCHRISTIEChristie Eclipse 4K RGB Pure Laser ProjectorGary KlassenBlackBerry QNXGeneral MagicCP24Inscriber offers Adobe After Effects plug-in to streamline productionBlackBerry Liquid GraphicsGoogle LLC v. Oracle America, Inc.Intro Song InfoMiss You by Sarah Jansen https://soundcloud.com/sarahjansenmusicCreative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0Free Download / Stream: http://bit.ly/l-miss-youMusic promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/iYYxnasvfx8
Two questions we get asked (…in this order…) a lot are: 1. Can we use animated icons in XPression Maps 2. How do I add my own icons to XPression Maps You would think the questions would be in the opposite order, but… no. We get asked if it is possible, then how. Well, this video will not only show you how to do those, but we even spent a little bit of time to show how to do a simple concentric rings animation in Adobe After Effects. Living Live! with Ross Video www.rossvideo.com/XPression-U
While XPression is a very powerful real-time motion graphics system, designers still might favor creating content in their favorite desktop content creation tools. With the ability to import Adobe Photoshop files into XPression and retain their layers, adding the ability to import Adobe After Effects animation tracks provides a way to bring the animations created by the desktop designers to XPression. Actually, it is pretty simple. So sit back, watch Greg Oz take you through the steps. Living Live! with Ross Video www.rossvideo.com/XPression-U
25th May - It's Adobe After Effects day and so I am very much screened out. One of my friends is very poorly and I discuss an idea for a new YouTube Channel. Much love and gratitude Belle x
18th May - A discussion about my artistic endeavours in this week's Adobe After Effects course as well as some chat about Freeze The Fear, with Wim Hof. Much love and gratitude, Belle x
0:48 VIDEO GAME Maps Size Comparison | 2021 by MrRanker (Blender, Adobe After Effects & Premiere Pro) released 19 Sept 2020 19:05 Blu x @Teflon Sega meta-saga!! Ep4 by Xanadu (Unreal 4.27) released 9 Mar 2022 32:26 Star Trek Pike – Fan Made Opening | Made in Star Trek Online by ZEFilms Productions released 1 July 2019 and the possibilities for using machinima as a pre-market concept testing tool 41:36 It just a virtual kiss by Juan Poyuan (World of Warcraft) released 19 Nov 2021 53:00 Discussion: What is experimental machinima and why do it?Website: Credits:Speakers: Phil Rice, Ricky Grove, Tracy Harwood, Damien ValentineProducer/Editor: Ricky GroveMusic: Til I Hear'em Say (Instrumental) - NEFFEX
11th May - It's week 3 of my Adobe After Effects course tonight and so I fill in the day's chat with a stark warning from a time traveller. Much love and gratitude, Belle x
This week: MaxTech joins us to talk Mac Studio, M1 Ultra Performance, and Apple REUSING the M1 in the 2022 MacBook Air! This episode supported by Remotely manage your Mac, iPhone, or iPad with Jamf. Manage 3 devices for FREE at jamf.com/beyond Easily create a beautiful website all by yourself, at Squarespace.com/cultcast. Use offer code CultCast at checkout to get 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. Cult of Mac's watch store is full of beautiful straps that cost way less than Apple's. See the full curated collection at Store.Cultofmac.com CultCloth will keep your Mac Studio, Studio Display, iPhone 13, glasses and lenses sparkling clean, and for a limited time use code CULTCAST at checkout to score a free CarryCloth with any order at CultCloth.co. This week's stories Ming Chi Kuo with some Twitter Bangers Apple's got way too many AirPods models and it's confusing as hell! Under the screen face ID is coming to iPhone, but not for a while (marketing issue) Next MacBook Air will reuse the M1 chip! New Apple Watch health features: What's in, what's out - Lewis Cupertino is likely to add body temperature readings and other new health features to Apple Watch and the Health app in 2022, but it looks like blood pressure and blood glucose monitoring will have to wait, according to a new report. Final Cut Pro, Adobe After Effects updated for latest M1 processors Apple and Adobe added better support for Apple silicon to a couple of their marquee applications for video professionals. This is what Apple's upcoming dual USB-C charger looks like Photos of Apple's unreleased dual USB-C charger with a total output of 35W have surfaced online.
In this week's “Throwback Thursday / Where are they now?” segment, we hear from Peter Quinn, creator of amazing Instagram videos made with Adobe After Effects. He recently worked on a video with Snoop Dogg! Side Hustle School features a new episode EVERY DAY, featuring detailed case studies of people who earn extra money without quitting their job. This year, the show includes free guided lessons and listener Q&A several days each week. Show notes: SideHustleSchool.com Email: team@sidehustleschool.com Be on the show: SideHustleSchool.com/questions Connect on Twitter: @chrisguillebeau Connect on Instagram: @193countries Visit Chris's main site: ChrisGuillebeau.com If you're enjoying the show, please pass it along! It's free and has been published every single day since January 1, 2017. We're also very grateful for your five-star ratings—it shows that people are listening and looking forward to new episodes.
oday on Video Marketing Madness – How to add Special Effects. Ray provides excellent tips on adding special effects to your videos. Ray starts by using the Adobe After Effects animation software, and he uses that with the DaVinci Resolve editor. Envato Elements has a lot of great plugins and templates for a very low yearly price, and you can find those at RaysLinks.com/Envato. You can also colorize your videos, use and add transitions from Envato and create animated titles. Today's episode is made possible by Movo! Get great microphones, stands, and lights for your videos at http://www.rayslinks.com/movo Check out Steve's YouTube channel – Steve Sleeper Railfan.
Let's talk about After Effects Multi-Frame Rendering with Matt Bach, Kyle Hamric, and Ian Sansavera! What is Multi-Frame Rendering? What kind of performance gains can you expect? How does it compare to RenderGarden, BG Render MAX, etc? How will it change people's workflow? Find out the answers and even check out some real-world examples! Date: Tuesday, October 19th Time: 1:00pm Pacific Guests: Houston Bennett, Matt Bach, Kyle Hamrick, Ian Sansavera --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/puget-systems/message
In the pre show for Episode 29 MIke and Brandon discuss the World Series and Brandon's obsession with cake. Mike discusses a question from a listener, Teddy Ruiz of @tedszenwood, which asks Mike about having Mike's daughter design a logo for his business. Mike discusses the use of Adobe After Effects and has an idea about creating an open for the YouTube channel. Brandon discusses his FTO school. Theme music by David Fesliyan. Saw and siren sound effects added by Mike Marrazzo during post production.Follow Handcuffs & Sawdust on social media:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/handcuffsan...Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Handcuffsand...YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCy0OFXFWnb4p7BriVF4-n5w Support Mike on his social media accounts:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marrazzowoodworking/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCokB...Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/Marrazzowoodworking?ref=seller-platform-mcnavFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/marrazzowoodworking Support Brandon on his social media accounts:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fullhousewo...Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/FullHouseWo...
So che pensavate di averla scampata, e invece no!Anche in questo inizio settembre il buon (?) Alex Gì vi parla blaterando cose a vanvera della sua prossima suppa-big app, Batch Buddy AE, che promette di rivoluzionare il modo con cui si realizzano grossi progetti con Adobe After Effects.I miei concorrenti: https://dataclay.com/templater/TechnoPillzFlusso di coscienza digitale.Vieni a chiacchierare sul riot:https://t.me/TechnoPillzRiotAscoltaci live tutti i giorni 24/7 su: http://runtimeradio.itScarica l'app per iOS: https://bit.ly/runtAppContribuisci alla Causa andando su:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/
Always Off Brand Season 1 Ep 20 “Heavy Pours With Photo & Video Big Tips!” 8/17/2021 Co-Hosts Summer Jubelirer & Scott Ohsman welcomes in Haley Fortuno and Jesse Circelli from Quickfire to talk about some serious photography and videography for your products no matter where you are selling them. Bigtime pro tips as always and why you need to budget more than you are for great assets for your brand. Hayley Brucker & The News joins us as well with some great stories and more Forum Funnies. Warning, you will learn and be entertained at the same time. QUICKFIRE Info: Website: https://www.quickfirenow.com/ Email the Show: info@quickfirenow.com Talk to us on Social: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/quickfireproductions Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/quickfire__/ LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/company/quickfire-productions-llc/about/ More Stuff Mentioned: Demand Side Platform - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand-side_platform Outdoor Biz Podcast - https://ricksaez.com/ Golden Hour - https://www.borrowlenses.com/blog/golden-hour-photography/ Massview - https://massview.com/ DaVinci Resolve Editing Software - https://www.blackmagicdesign.com/products/davinciresolve/ Adobe PhotoShop -https://www.adobe.com/ Adobe After Effects - https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/plans.html?filter=video-audio&promoid=7WQ463BS&mv=other&plan=individual Cocktail Movie Clip - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFuBvEt84OI&t=99s Used Cars Movie Clip - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqHZWdFVyyQ HOSTS: Summer Jubelirer has been in digital commerce and marketing for over 15 years. After spending many years working for digital and ecommerce agencies working with multi-million dollar brands and running teams of Account Managers, she is now the Director of Ecommerce at a leading hydration brand, Hydralyte. LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/summerjubelirer/ Scott Ohsman has been working with brands for over 25 years in retail, online and has launched over 200 brands on Amazon. Owning his own sales and marketing agency in the Pacific NW, is now VP of Digital Commerce for Quickfire LLC. Scott has been a featured speaker at national trade shows and has developed distribution strategies for many top brands. LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott-ohsman-861196a6/ Huge thanks to Cytrus our show theme music “Office Party” available wherever you get your music. Check them out here: Facebook https://www.facebook.com/cytrusmusic Instagram https://www.instagram.com/cytrusmusic/ Twitter https://twitter.com/cytrusmusic SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6VrNLN6Thj1iUMsiL4Yt5q?si=MeRsjqYfQiafl0f021kHwg APPLE MUSIC https://music.apple.com/us/artist/cytrus/1462321449 “Always Off Brand” is part of the Quickfire Podcast Network and produced by Quickfire LLC.
Enjoy relaxing fireplace sounds as you go about your day.
Enjoy the relaxing ocean ambiance to help you sleep instantly, focus easily, or meditate effortlessly.
Want to take your E-learning game to the next level but not ready to get into all of the things with Adobe After Effects? Trust me I feel you. Well in today's episode we are going to chat all about my thoughts on the animation tool – Vyond! Are you ready to learn more about developing your eLearning portfolio and find your tribe? Join my Freelance Learning & Development Network on Facebook and follow me over on Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube and/or Twitter for all things eLearning! Thanks for listening! If you enjoyed this episode, please leave me a rating and review, and share it with your friends. Have an incredible day!
When Piper was just starting out, we offered curated Instagram content and podcast support. Then we moved to vlogging and LinkedIn content. Each time we grew, we did so by first trying out new strategies and ideas in our own content. Now, with nothing but time on our hands, the creative team has been hard at work expanding our skill sets by learning Adobe After Effects. In this episode, HP discusses how the team is expanding our skill sets to include After Effects and Animation. Stay Safe Wash Your Hands Support Your Community & Those in Need ~”Expand Your Mind, Fill Your Heart, Grow Your Tribe”~
SANS Internet Stormcenter Daily Network/Cyber Security and Information Security Stormcast
Enumerating Who "Owns" a Workstation for IR https://isc.sans.edu/forums/diary/Whodat+Enumerating+Who+owns+a+Workstation+for+IR/25822/ Special Update for Adobe After Effects and Media Encoder https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/after_effects/apsb20-09.html https://helpx.adobe.com/security/products/media-encoder/apsb20-10.html Cisco Updates https://tools.cisco.com/security/center/content/CiscoSecurityAdvisory/cisco-sa-on-prem-static-cred-sL8rDs8 Apple To No Longer Accept Certifcates as Valid that Exceed a Lifetime of 13 months https://www.theregister.co.uk/2020/02/20/apple_shorter_cert_lifetime/ Python ReDoS Bugs https://blog.r2c.dev/posts/finding-python-redos-bugs-at-scale-using-dlint-and-r2c/
EPISODIO #1 (10 de Abril de 2019) Un podcast sobre edición de video y herramientas para cineastas desde el punto de vista de usuarios de Final Cut Pro X. _______ En este episodio hablamos de algunas novedades del NAB 2019, en especial las que nos han ofrecido Black Magic con su DaVinci Resolve 16 y otras de sus novedades. Hablamos del futuro de la inteligencia artificial aplicada a la edición, a raíz de SCRIBOMATIC, el plugin de transcripción automática de Coremelt. También debatimos sobre el 8K y damos nuestras impresiones sobre las cámaras semi-profesionales que hay en el mercado como Panasonic, Sony, Canon o Fuji. Repasamos algunos plugins nuevos aparecidos para FCPX y damos nuestras opiniones y pequeños trucos. Enlaces que mencionamos: -mTRANSITION Brush de MOTIONVFX: https://www.motionvfx.com/mplugs-216.html -Borrar objetos en Adobe After Effects: https://www.finalcutpro.es _______ Si os ha gustado este episodio y queréis ayudarnos, que sepáis que dándonos 5 estrellas, comentando o compartiendo este podcast nos ayudáis enormemente. No olvidéis suscribiros en la plataforma que mas uséis como iTunes, iVoox, Spotify o Anchor para enteraros antes que nadie cuando colguemos un episodio nuevo. Si queréis contactar con nosotros estamos en Facebook, o mandando un mail a elcortefinalpodcast@gmail.com. El Corte Final es un podcast creado por: Jordi Extremera: Instagram @daddymaza Twitter @daddymaza Web: ricenpix.com Mail: info@rincenpix.com Jesus Hernandez: Twitter @MotionFX_es Web: motionfx.es Mail: jesus@motionfx.es
Is faking it until you make it a bad thing? Can it snowball into positive energy or is just a "Florida Snowball"? Eric Readinger and Law Smith go over this and provide pragmatic, business development advice about Bark.com and Drift, conversational marketing. Please Support Our Sponsors That Support Our Girthy Show! This episode's girthy sponsor is FreshBooks, the best cloud accounting software for hustlers, entrepreneurs or anyone with a side piece business. Sweat Equity listeners get a free 30 day trial of FreshBooks. TO HELP THE SHOW, PLEASE USE OR SHARE OUR UNIQUE LINK GoFreshBooks.com/Sweat Like any young, plucky business or passion project, any revenue from our sponsors will be reinvested right into the podcast and streaming show. Subscribe, 5 ⭐ And Please Write A Review! The funniest or biggest hater reviews are likely to get a shout out on the show. Where To Listen, Watch, Review, and Share With A Friend! Spotify http://bit.ly/swequity iTunes http://bit.ly/se-it Laughable http://bit.ly/2k7y6Ff YouTube: http://bit.ly/se-yt Facebook: http://bit.ly/se-fbp Yeah yeah now are going now are going to tech difficulties have been her issue lately Erickson's register just relax I'm getting down mad I and to functioning so dad mad sitting still Newport is up to me the Apple Watch don't tell you to freeze yeah it's college full of useless reminders of all been forget to breathe I'll be I'll be sitting there just thinking about an argument that I just had but I'm sitting still and it's like in a box up that the worst one is the one that says you haven't done anything in your heart rate at 120 yeah will that's not good at sudsy that's me if you don't think it's reef you may go to the doctor know that now I mean that's me getting picked by heart rate is higher normally just nothing but I'm saying life does not come to be proud that's weird it's still not proud of its it's scary is on St. John the hypochondriac so I've architected by Dr. it's that's what I do I bring a list of questions every time ago and 1/2 shout out to Dr. to Onyx and the evil he loves his podcast and so these numbers soar knows what five gases here but I bring a list of questions and I'm not proud of you understand that's that's crazy psychosomatic, so your brain can get you so mad but physically my doing anything internally physically and yet will wait when you met at other than the technical difficulties that we now know I guess I start transition between thoughts little bit but I am bad how much time we spend on tech issues and that's the good kind segue into apologizing to the audience about last two weeks we've read some good news bad news we've had we have some good things in the hopper coming up unfortunately have to do that they were super vague because we can't that's the bad news you can really talk about it yet just no trust me we will talk to shoot out of it once we can but yeah and maybe more frequency to Yahoo I can wear those that yeah so so good news is stuff in the future near future to look good no matter what happens if we get this thing going we have a backup plan anyway bad news is we we didn't thank you enough episodes were schedule our time together to do episodes with gas Regis got her a self the last one Eric you did a great job on your ear I went good news bad news right now I started that way and then cheers and jeers and knowing what's your notes on how they did know this stuff so not Celica report card or anything I thought you did a really good job you had a yen of Jacqueline Jack yeah my funky face between my wife and my best friend who they have about zero respect for my opinions and whatnot he wrangled them as much as you could know why I thought it was good idea I don't know what I was thinking but career what it is not as bad as you say you have a listener back right now though I was in the first five seconds and it was me maxing out and I was liking the audit in the audio is a little bad debts on the deal I think a lot of people were we only three of the audio file, listeners I think a lot of people put up with that you were not a music podcast so it's like yeah or were not like audio tech people, podcasts so voiceover podcasts I'm sure made some people mad and I hope they don't unsubscribe but we tried it removed figure get something out is better than not get it out all can we want to make sure we get one this week on Thursdays like we've been doing it will even know it has been that bad it's been maybe one week this appears that one of the last three weeks right yeah but it is interesting about being consistent first podcast is so huge to someone who absorbed a lot of them I get perturbed if I don't know there's not the episode coming up sometimes when you're really bored are you really a monotony you can rely on like right will Rogan podcast three or four and when he goes hunting doesn't tell you you're like dude that's I mean just the volume used with notes so hours a week so on-air I thought you good opinions and it made me reflect a little bit that get some good angles weaved in their bike route the data about I do know how I forgot how libertarian you can be a way okay before we start breaking me down the house you want this is a good thing do you want to what about Facebook's William sponsorship I probably another weave and it that's part of this that I was just like I don't even surface books now I know you and appalled, I found you to get to that those villagers I had you know I know but it maybe reflect I gotta stop steamrolling the is there stuff that you got on your mind probably and I probably talk over that's that was the jeers to begin you can help it but everybody's over talking yeah the amino I don't really feel that way from you but you Bruckner also hosts it will close ally single leg, most but yeah so someone's gotta come to guide the boat a little bit and someone no it's it it's as if there's more fluidity I'd say going forward it's gotta be like I never watch out ice hockey players discount they get in their and there they get enough first second third fourth line right altogether and they're just fluid they don't talk to each other yet but they know what to do they come to get in there and cut fluidity a little bit yeah I'm not coming in for podcast practice that I'm talking about why that's why there is no atonement sexual fluidity we have to bang I'm saying like I just got pickup basketball like you play because you never met you you somehow have to buy kind no everybody kind of roof falls into line so sometimes you're cheap sometimes you're Indian I thought John Paul did a good job asking questions is the everyman I thought I thought Nikki actually was really great your life as a Leica sometimes you're the sharpshooter you're kind of the assassin when you're on a podcast a lot of Mike's right so she would just kinda like to do I throw in something every now and again you lease the beginning half that happens a lot love of focus but I think yeah I think she was singer for O choose audio I think you know you try going from dome about how was going as you do it and it was fun for which no good story with the most important things we got that story on hand and maybe actually help someone else yeah okay you know the subject matter itself to me is what they are doing psychedelics you know that's my love else it wasn't anybody's silly story so there is that you know I feel like there's a lot of stuff that can help you come out of it so if you can manage not hearing quality audio there will be a good thing who knows this this episode with the tech issues could we have three things recording audio just in case and they might not might work who knows yet is be patient with us please our equipment is elsewhere that's all we can say and them even Cameron is no action on it so I hope they they face fulfill their end of the bargain were there to replace it yeah because really thought a lot of love and then we don't get a lot back from me calling you about Meebo so the other digit temperatures is just no describing a product there's audit you remember the audio listeners and he tried a little bit but it was deftly like you said y'all were describing a mustache and I was like yeah looks like this and then you open this up and it's like the unusual words that yeah I couldn't tell if Dave wanted to really and I think I asked him get into the pit side of it in terms of like him doing it you know him describing it you know you said you said also that I do wrong that you this isn't this is it like a report card and this is all this is good the fact that we got it up and out and I was like I was the guy running around outside of the park and studio I lost my wallet I was frantically doing a lot of like I do want to work it was just a bad like I should I want to be in here so it's even weirder for y'all that I'm in the office while you are recording the podcast yeah I was in a really related will give a little subtle hi Todd you get this show started ready to take that sweat equity which I tell you to do that but that's that's okay it's not your design work on I would say fresh books we will from Oco that was the only real jeers at no no no wheat we have an affiliate link sorry it's go fresh books.com/select okay not promo code sweat this I don't know we don't get that we should plan to make my mortgage payment is really ticked that up the whole thing's going under now or go belly up because that promo code air yet were not from the goat but we do have an affiliate link and all the others are promo code it'll be in the description which you just have it statically on our site since we don't really change the sponsors to too much we can have all three of them her main sponsors up I'll make a note of that three display sponsors website your notetaking voice although you have sounds like Mr. Peabody I'll end up doing that shooting look I'm crushing out my taxes right now for the business of total body consulting the officer sitting in us refer this and it QuickBooks is terrible I gotta get off that I got delivered fresh books I don't I administratively I can't I get that Florida snowball where I can't get that move over yet but I'm going to the circus flock for QuickBooks freshwater life you will explain floors noble I don't remember what was it's when you have it you have a task or project you have to do and it keeps need you to come to delaying it whether you procrastinate whether it's a legit reason or not and then it just becomes this huge thing that you never get to in this case it's no it's Artie melted now after sucking cramped it's literally the opposite it's a snow globe KYLE never keeps growing and then it just melts eventually I think of a better name that you get will go to their source I know I'm still pushing Florida's no-fault wide yeah itself it will figure out a better term Outlook I'm elastic with it I'm flexible and I'm to say go fresh books.com/sweat baggage that 30 day free trial that hook up holler fear me all are I I've got you do you have anything you want to talk about I think the lead will talk about is it is kind inside Yukon outside of you yeah so where does it for doesn't lie just if you're not big management rose talk I want to fast for the next at least five minutes probably I hope it's a whole pocket honestly it were a public service I've got a hemorrhoid right now that it's life-changing and it's been a learning experience I've got all sorts of new issues so first of all you can get hemorrhoids from sitting on the toilet to figure that out I knew that before I got there wife but what I figured out I was doing was sitting on the toilet to avoid my kids asked me to do stuff they will bother anyone proven my guess so to sit on the toilet take my sweet time and one day that it just happened all was going far did you feel it yeah like his older son yeah was the first time that it was like late late came out I was like oh no really I had on the music as it does normally it kind of Pulitzer for slowly but this left for trip felt so it was good it's legit it was a big one is big one still will deal with it but I do it it's like really painful and I got buddy whose physician's assistant and it was of the pointer is like you're have to come over and looking somewhat BH and he was all for if it is a beautiful everybody wedding, he would totally do it will be weird about it you got have a friend like that yeah and menus Marine's budget but so in anticipation of my body looking in my but I trimmed down there and now I'm dealing with the worst chafing possible and I don't know what to do minutes just everything just it's a Florida snowball man no it also describe it is so sarcastic it just keeps frontages one thing after another keeps Avenue I wish to adjust them right at this point now every time I get you notice how you can best be to get up at go to the cross of all of them like yeah we'll get to it preshow we are trying to figure out tech issues are our friends across the hall to eight monkeys and dimming out bizarre frequent guest of the program I like to discover their office I didn't even put that together I was in the zone working on executive summary farm is his plan hydrocortisone can you pick can you get some with talking music mind that that's up from a bath I know I noticed it is asserted yeah I think you're going have to find my my blanket on the dude's name I love what can you log and you have yeah yeah yeah why don't we start every show can you log is a little bit it does any log now I love arcade fire but they're not really bringing the birth like Kenny Loggins so how many days we had this this is like two weeks now well yeah and it's it it slowly gets better no matter, what you do always what I've done flipping the Lincoln high school gets better right will no remember that campaign several of I'm just I was okay of the hemorrhoidal way yeah it'll go away I guess because I'm not really paying attention to it are the ones worried about last crack tree thinking to death so a little grumpy you won't talk more about it doesn't mean does it affect your energy yeah in the crazy did the tell anybody know when characters write no will to hear that get off your lazy ass through the thing I care because it's funny right and that's what you know about is I know is brighten your day the funny thing to me is when your friends drink too much and barf like I don't know why I think it's because there's a punitive a little bit and when you bar I hate barfing so much that I think it's so funny because you can't breathe it is kind like this you know this pain is temporary sits up some real yeah and you brought it on yourself really really injured before you really start about life you know what my friends at right right even minor injuries will be funny if you're not injured wasn't next yeah what is it comity equals pain plus time overall over a little bit sometimes it's immediate and beautiful man should ever that I have what made you name it yeah Alfonso, you name it like like the name the hurricanes next will be be the name is you plan on another incoming the back of the last one out that Manuel was as I have learned a lesson here is a site trusting like busting your first night and you like I from now on you will be doing more that you know like or is it just a one time the I am asking the question I don't know if my blood snow sure like it it's about more prone to it now if it is one all out I don't know yes when I is like a baby I anticipate at least 25 more Chris Kelly letters are in the alphabet 26 yeah spells you anyway so many others that going on in life my life do the work part was that like I didn't know about a pooper not because the nerve endings down there you don't realize that that's what's filling out the poop the pressure on the nerve endings so when those get messed up I'm some consul revealing my fiction I don't what is that it is okay in an it's this constant confusion I get that a lot think you have mud but it's your sweat yeah it is what it gathers long avoidance that I've got an asset doesn't quit is this done take any days off notification personal days and that he had quit so when it's hot out in Florida and I walked around Mike, I do probably 99% of the time it's never issue but I have to check so good I feel you yeah upcoming I might just get going a little bit embarrassing on justice, get down this level with you wow to sweaty butt holes is definitely that's not right you live in Florida yeah everybody every man is that I believe were thinking of the frequency of which I have to do this I Smith I know most of you know I run hot to yes so there's that part is well I'm sitting on your saddle which I'm sure would hurt all overly say Erica saddle share in which I highlight because it actually makes me sit up half the time my postures that I'm going like scoliosis most of the time I know so I've got I got kind of a topic that I did run by you before and I meant to we are Stu too many things anything else you got no no other things grown out of me or anything that's it so are we trying to shoot for with these episodes were given this one normal retraction for that 33 Mark we might have to do in the future or we might do my computer optimal what you got to talk about labels will keep sure the guy was upside so I listen to y'all's episode one of the few without me in it and dad I like the shout outs talk about what I was doing pretty funny and I was walking the dogs understand think about it about faking it you make it kind of thing and not Ruth not really related to performance of urologist just how many people I talked to in the startup game or you know how many business owners who talk to about how the fake it till you take it kindly it's like everybody I write that social media to me is kind of that personal scale yeah because it's it would follow Israel I like I don't like that I don't like it scope coin F what is if you're missing out right I deftly have it for sure I deftly got a check is a might why do I give a shape I should be happy for people that doing all these things I'm the person I want to do a bunch of different things right entrepreneurial different things I like the variety is the spice of life but II deftly was like I need to not you know when things are good and our own don't don't get jealous or envious of what you see a histogram of your friends doing direction I want to do that yes the other side me though I know I got your being included battle of the hall and you know what you want your kids you will be letting her know that you got your kids young if you're taking them controllers of diverticulitis was a huge pain in the ass like it's working a little over so that's nice but yeah only I told Shlomo to start my just to leave have anywhere and unpack so what I'm saying is I get that social media life on a personal scale. It was nonbusiness he know a lot of people don't show the bad stuff and when they do it usually like I don't have health insurance I got a car wreck here's a go funny right you know that's the bad stuff I used to take miserable pics yeah I'm a joke but kind of like we go on spring break look like we've not had a good time at all in college yeah and just have that would those be the only photos out there my wife and I do that sometimes reasons do like to be at a show behind stage like really exciting which is fake like the word out about time I visited that's good nobody does that I think it's real life yeah I think the regular basis to do that we take the ugliest pictures of himself yeah. January does that yes I think like I think there's a over sharing thing were you know I was trying to do the accountable wake up take a picture of the watch deal how many days did you make it I did about three weeks and you know it becomes unraveled just for a lot of stuff at home as far as time management you were still moving in God thing that cut that throws in a variable that I can't really control yeah and that means not sleeping you should be posing a weeklong snapshot yeah I just googled one's week will soak my whole thing was like New York I agree with you because I don't turn off anybody else or not more people I had more people talk to me about this 430 wake-up thing little bit like anything iconic consistently post online the idea was to be consistent to I've ever an issue with routine consistency I thought this would give me accountable to Connie did my wife thought I was become a dish bag with it sounds like okay but can't bum me out so I was like just I don't need to do that I just I'll do it on my own I don't need a posted but it didn't two people did reach out to help them yet the accountability is what it's about now it's if you know you're having to pose that thing that that feeling of not doing it that's what that's what it's for so there's that weird I don't know there's a duality to me doing something to Matt for some kind of campaign like that personal but self-improvement thing but II will get back to kind of fake it till you make it in my big thing I heard Chris Sacca in areas thinks Chris Sacca look this up okay he is one of the main investors of Uber he's one of Phil land shark tank guys always wears a cowboy shirt I don't trestle of that shirt I do because I wear rodeo shirt that was my state shirts I like it because it's like as Zuckerberg with it.just total gray shirts every day you just don't have to think about it is that with this guy does he does these Servicemaster you every day yes now it's up I think your pearl snaps I'm not sure but it's deftly nestled Western he kind of textile but if you feel it feels like an old glove, thank based on lies to wear every day what he lives in Idaho Silicon Valley got now there's Idaho I think her Montana because you can tell that's how good he is yeah so I heard him on upon a podcast I want to sit with Bill Simmons is like three years ago he talked about how he started up and he literally said he just faked everything until he made he failed already wants with an idea that he got so ingrained in that he was like $-800,000 in like of his own not even not even like investor something it was like he was making money doing something on the sideline trend is one part and it backfired and then he had to start all over and he had like law school payments 2% like that and so I'm butchering probably a story but the main the main part was the way she got through was praying he said he thought this like they could to make it attitudes it's an entrepreneurial kind of philosophy a little bit so a lot of startups want to immature businesses three years or younger I said you kinda have to say yes to a lot of stuff get your foot in the door that you might not do yeah video tell me there's got to be Sony video thank you… Yeah I mean it's your like the fake it till you make it think it's like almost like the negative connotations were you know because it's your right everybody there is an aspect to it for everything don't be a phony it's just like you're being adaptable when you're being your wanting to learn about it you know it's really you just can't tell somebody don't know what it is that you're trying to do what I was like hey an like there's a really I we have a project that pays a lot I need you to do Adobe After Effects on video that's a situation like okay I know little bit practical rest I'd say okay yeah probably got a problem and then take a couple hours and you scramble uniting my fellowship yeah and I mean there's the thing about it is like we say it's for immature visit but you know any sort of new anything any sort of new aspect of the business is going to have you know it's like you don't know where it's going you don't know what you're trying to do with it so a lot of us do in real life a nonbusiness you discover your life so you know how to do this right at home your late dads do this a lot yeah I'm mounted on a nonexistent TV before I got it yet and it's like I got it I'm done it before yeah it's a it's a weird ego attachment thing you know like why only our generation has it as much but like her dad's generation stuff like I'd much rather just look like a jackass trying to figure it out in the front yard and look it up on the Internet and then actually learn how to do something correctly you know both have extreme the sale points right to life our generation just feels like on the Percy got a knife and I like I do like the older generations they go Amanda figured out phenomenally talking from a man's perspective really meet or dad perspectives like yet you just figured out that's what you do that's that's how you do it you just say yes you do it they were really asking you if you know how a lot of time a lot of people to go can you do this not you know how true this with our generation it's the other way to the extremities are either your snowflake and don't how to do it in your very honest yeah but you're articulating in a way that says I don't know anything about anything or your expert because you watch YouTube videos yeah I mean I've seen deftly both sides of it but it's like is the desire to learn it they are or not you know like we've had people that sleep I don't know how to do this and yet the holder through trust that you did you try did you Google it first drive as I frowned and I knew quite what were really good one of top five skills we have to just be patient to Google stuff yeah like for real like you can find out almost any how to do almost at its all out there you just need to be patient and figure out what exactly you need to search for the search term keyword that's important you know you don't necessarily know what you're looking for the best lesson I got when I worked at dimensional fund advisors mutual fund company in Santa Monica was was it right and I know I do Excel but I didn't know advanced stuff and I would ask a lot of questions because I was told no asked questions will don't don't sit on stuff and so it's better to ask questions and not but that I that shorthand right just saying ask questions after you've worked it out for a minute yeah after you've exhausted all of your mental capacities so I asked I would ask when I do this if you look at formula on Excel and I think Rochon John Shannon shout out to my buddy nobody but he was technically by Boster over me or whatever and it hears all to implement missionary this anywhere in my computer type is funky for all like that for him no is addressing the that is I'm so glad that everyone is 2122 that's the best legend we live in an era where we can do that right like how fortunate are we 10 years before you could yeah 20 it was like my parents and stuff like I really have to resist not doing that you can just type everything here the so far. Phil tells the yeah that do not know your audience but like what what I really want to get to his energies, contagious rights will so you're having a bad day and you don't bring that to the office rights I I vent to you but I think that's more cathartic when were talking about stuff going on personally a all energies already happened and it's all it correlates so heavily with what we do here to because worklife balance is used for an agency or firm or whatever we are this office so phenotyping of you can bring positive energy and you can go home and bring that guy around right now yet maybe a pessimistic parts is your personality test yeah but you bring positive energy yes you don't love anybody out yet as you say people is way to observe eight people I does the will think not expecting the good that happened that they have a questions and not going to be overly optimistic to that that was extreme example to give a figment to make it were you can have delusions of grandeur right things are going well room the right direction yeah I definitely have been guilty of that yeah it's doubly contagious all that stuff Alicia a little meter so to settle her energies were doing today it's on Apple watch Tony agrees here is a quick energy so I want to say is you know you might not want to do the job you're doing and I was there right I wanted to stand up for as I got older and my professional career wanted to do some entrepreneurial things like this and the deal was like decent good that day job bring positive energy because if you find people out it comes back to you yet twice as heavy. The fact that negativity but that's that I heard that almost blows my mind for every email you send out you get 2.3 DAC really like work emails that's why like people to stop emails, died but for something to be reformatted with that but my thing is like it has like almost an exponential effect on slaves yeah for sure like Evernote that she is person you know for the worst attitude you ever notice how much should they have going on in their life bad right this is right it's you kick that dog to what it can also that psychosomatic way to become a star of the show like it can have an effect on you physically hello they can safari you can create this echo chamber neither way talk about that with the online world were you can create an echo chamber of opinions you can do that with like positive or negative, enthusiasm definitely socially online please let something pop off my best friends Lincoln song used to tell me he inmate he makes himself self smile more when he talks because it puts in a better mood yet that we had to do when you're talking Brian Aguiar yeah you make sure he likes if you sing in a single little smile will demoralize doing you know that the jammin out the car listen to George Strait yeah it's like when I I accidentally do bad traffic move that somebody offer something and they try to get up next to me big cheesy smile every time given notice like that's yeah hello that was truly exactly Laura hold the bottom teeth like a if you tie on you loosen it yet the group here is more tension for do you mean but I think it's a big thing that and if you're by yourself a lot we do a lot of work that's like Connor isolated it's like I'm in a jam out this website for this ad campaign it's a lot of work we are just sitting the computer by yourself what short-term memory don't talk to the document running his own, thank and sometimes you know if you bring negative energy into that they chose it yet chose to consciously work if it does that with or in general is going to be like that that way or your art so abstract no marriage pretty records of the like that that leak you have the removal of the art is the closest thing to your your whatever you call your energy you know at that time that your your paintings on their telling is just clearly creative but if you're doing work it might not show up as obviously but it's in a business sense to if you were totally transparent we we we promote that we are as transparent as we can, be but if you show everything how the sausage is made every business has a weak point rocketing like hey you find my books, the law does like to do in his mind is not we can't find a bookkeeper we want to use up like that's an example right there like a known asked to hear about the hat and then be like note why would we short while we tell people that everything right they don't need to know it's not that were hiding anything right yeah does effective run post social it is something about now anything is is is all family background Amanda Reuters else's think my hemorrhoid is the badness coming out who you know I didn't think about that but maybe were the good I don't know it's got to go back in okay second not like a baby to so click the I think I got Lance to the no I cannot cancel my buddies chickened out that will not get better this is getting better slowly the you bring positive energy to that situation right my and really this I thought of this because I've I've always heard on the parenting tip and this is kind number one in my book I'm not a parent to rule by any means we'll wrap up with two kids are under two but before we had kids before you thought about it I would sure like sponge off a lot of energy right will so whatever you like my parents didn't want to talk about finances a lot were did want to talk about what, like a cold Norwegian family lifetime very right and I don't talk about feelings a lot yeah you your family by talk about feelings yeah healthy yeah we try to it's really just like they kids alone while being human yet so there watching the humans they see the most often and if you're going to be however you are there and want to be like daddy or mommy and so that's if you end up turning what happens know right now I'd like I handle situations people think I'm impatient I think I'm actually pretty patient I just like to vocalize a lot it impatient whites bother me immediately like little stuff yeah but people thought cut me a line all the time I don't know why they don't notice they do it it's my superpower. It's so weird it's so weird by why superpower is getting the shootings customer service person anywhere like you'll be by physically at a target or whatever right of the three people Joel somehow picked the wrong one every time Orville get the most should get them a ship for nothing manager what kind of like you don't think it's a contagious energy to do but note it online I never kid now I just think like a lot of people think I'm a hothead I think a lot of friends and I like now I do for comedic effect but like you know if you if you have 12 items and you go in that in the express line at the grocery store I get perturbed talk I'll say something about out loud but it's 10 items or less just the fact that you counted on 12 is okay 20 why the real Nozick speed limit in no speed limit 60 with real speed limit 70 okay how about this if you do it I'm cool but you gotta be quick but you gotta have some potato combines the lighting right X like me can't be like how I do this you can't especially slick self checkout should find someone that only leadership that a baseline I'm saying like there is there is a subconscious energy to bring night I caught myself like I get frustrated and mumble myself up my son my dad was like no under pass it on my kid I don't do that and apply have that going off work I don't realize it well I think the you know young men are like so fall tool delicately really aggressive and stuff I think Dr. Firefox up it's just a young yet why me like early 20s ago I told the older you get in the older your kids are going to get your tires are going to become and the less energy you're going to have to get this off about 12 items nowhere in other fungus for dad to come to take HGH or some clinic that it humongous well enough whatever whatever does what if I don't if I am what hell if I feel a lot better have big no not to get Jack to cite have more testosterone at a later age can this up that this would be good for your wellness area yeah I don't know if it's the best you know so I know you're like 30 units like 50s 60s you want to start HGH very I'm talking really small really small doses doses of small penis really forgot that no why I think were good on that note oh I got a couple little things with the practical pragmatic stuff I'll probably do little tutorial videos and will maybe I'll throw in a Leica compilation is a makeup episode or notice the little one minute guys Gary V style will laugh this podcast lab interview ones are maybe longer and will have like 12 minute tutorial deals who knows but I do have to do a lifelike content like that for other stuff and I realize you know as much as we can give this advice out in the podcast sometimes some things are best but I was asked how to get on LinkedIn's provider someone brought up on heritable professional directory sometimes you gotta have like Justin's own little isolated video if we did that during the podcast episode become boring to be born here and I have to like, do it live on tape kind of thing right were loyal to your left yeah I rather just do something for a minute have that posted yet online to help people out position was supposed to be primary device bring anything you got to the table I told but so did you have something other than just you know you can so there's a site called fark.com that I forward you a bunch of potential work so if you're in a professional service I was on the roof your website clipart handoff will move that's that's alas stupid dumb choices with my kids but part.com we it's it's interesting thing I would say try to catch these these potential sites that can bring in revenue before a lot of other people if you dominate there you might have his niche so our listeners should know about that it was a it it's a website development like this people logging all for website developers write a bunch of stuff I was in the web development so if you wanted to do those kind of bid on it as as the company like us we have a certain amount of credits that you buy to bid on jobs that it's a marketplace I put around the United States I'll take any bids look at them and will give up like 124 credits this 116 credits and then you bid on those to get it going get the talks are pretty interesting up work is a similar thing but they don't do the credits back and forth system and so the reason this once good to get on now is because it is a UK thing first I feel like there only marketing it to the demand-side not the supply side which is so that that's why get so many Latinos, dad I literally cleared out 500 Boston you must love anybody on there so we we pulled in our criminal defense attorney client Brett Metcalf from Hillsboro to fenced off last Friday and I said let's do a dummy test like I've done other sites for Sega DUI to lipids, there's only one so so as the I did dummy test is the user trying to find professional services in the ZIP Code were in or the like city and only one other attorney and also that tells me my hypothesis prion one point that this is it there's not a lot of business the other thing I have if you want to website Toca works.com TOC of W Arkansas.com our business website not our part aren't brand-new sweat equity podcasts website all sweat equity conduct you if you go to our business I told her works.com you can check out this little chat option so you not succumb to gullies after software sites Check box pops up talk to you. We've embedded that drift the Company really interesting to see a lot more spots that look like a real persons have a conversation with you yeah but it's just the decision tree yeah so you had to set that up so I set up the basic if you are going to cite China set up a basic the most basic it took me 15 minutes to bed the widget but it the more you use it the more we might be able I looked at our traffic we don't get a lot of people that contact us as we should if you go down to to commit it pops up site is up as my picture Jeff it's I like these things that create engagement online that work in the background for school and then I integrated it with R/channel the general oh we again that I got a little will want to write sildenafil and Cameron for coverage if you are I able to see that you get on it we could have life conversations and then you can set it up to only pop up certain hours really interesting stuff go drift check out our website Seo Seo WR RPS.com and I'll be on the bottom right corner will take about they do like a three second pause before it really pops up so you see a little chat option on the bottom right desktop if possible hello but Sue, so those are two of the pragmatic kind of advice things that this is what the shows about general discourse about business philosophy figure to make it but also want to make sure were getting into the site these little things that we we know about that were going out all the time revitalize the chat chat window show up on mobile yeah but now you know you tested on non-Wi-Fi it goes to trial so you good yes builds of the people change life we are make sure to share this podcast of love one friend family member Wells people trying to start their own business at around the job they're doing that's really the audience that we think we can help with new email by way no Eric and in law sweat equity product goes through so it is up there that you got some ideas you want to send questions I want more of a mailbag from from listeners yeah I like answering questions plus that does all the preproduction for us basically be great work for us were run spot file iTunes Apple podcast Run video YouTube Facebook Facebook page LinkedIn Instagram we got a group we got to pay attention to and toss questions and big things around the corner excited and were excited that you made it this far just like Shawshank redemption if you made it this far larger, further and it really knew the show was over room the classic reason when Nick snapped his the ops guy productivity on produce podcasts and eco-so you can check the waves on their so you can see breakout in the sections
Sweat Equity FB Live w/ Eric Readinger, Damian Alpizar, Law Smith and our guest Joe Clay of Yellow Dog Party + Workbench talkin' about artists stealing from other artists, just starting, Adobe After Effects and more! #editing #graphicdesign #animation Ep Sponsor: Grasshopper, the virtual phone system. Sweat Equity listeners save $50 when they sign up using the special link TryGrasshopper.com/sweat Dragon Dictate Transcription Your library life we live we are alive that's that's what I was talking to my how you feeling Eric I'm getting educators along yeah well man that all changes yeah I said before off Mike I unabashedly love fall out boy cure number 33-year-old man three great fumes you three yeah I count them as they come in but we got Joe Clay here how many cubes if you have any encryptions yeah this is how you intervene in but I don't have an Excel sheet relevant for your first question but Serbia tough interview okay you don't have an Excel sheet that 12 I don't know what you're doing here honestly our producer since it is up that's me okay were to talk some graphic design some animation workbench.tv is your website and that passion project to teach young ends how to do stuff let's do our sponsor for this podcast sweat equity pragmatic realistic business advice hustle interviews sometimes Eric and I should ship sometime noises Damien Baltasar 28 monkeys durable direction if you're watching a video which is on YouTube Facebook origin of just listening you'll just hear that sultry voice limb area yeah because once bona fide run iTunes prion pod bailed other things that just pull pull that audio automatically but for the demographic yeah it keeps its two white we had had a mess it up a little bit developed a Relevant hammer yes they were there Chuck Cameron so let's do our sponsors Grasshopper phones you got business right Joe is so business phone lines how may people you call and you're like is this the bizarre house number or is this there just their cell phone, never misses a rigid self as noted tell yet but a lot of people need to act bigger than they are need act mortgage and especially people doing startups you noticed you need to act professional that's what you need a second phone line how does knowing how to answer the phone I answer hello when I answer my phone if I have a business plan when will I felt myself some angry so grasshoppers and app you can have in your phone and it will give you different kind of screen so you know it's that that still your Verizon or AT&T line or whatever personal line is and it's a scalable phone option it's the entrepreneurs phone line our listeners get 50 bucks off if they use the link and will put this in the episode description it's a tried grasshopper.com/sweat try Grasshopper.com/sweat like he's sweat get nasty real sultry and he got to come up with a better example go for it boy right now my only other one they brought us wet so what nuts where the only two I got off top my head but off camera but not sweat and fumes really taking this good time an area I national business and let's get Eric's favorite part we got to get it officially started God Almighty that's how you officially start the podcast I like old-school radio call-in that start every program with your your call into signed like that much like if you go on workbenches YouTube channel you've got I see the thumbnails have your branding on everything in a similar fashion it's the same thing it just irritates it because it's I let her do it to get you ramped up yeah get me fired alive and have seen he is always good it's a it's a miracle it's a little cheesy it's legit oh yeah it's cheesy for sure it's like a old it's it we soon football it's an old it's an old missing Ole Miss football that they have the hottie toddy I don't I don't know what it means it was in our fraternity we had some kind of chant like that just my opinion on its pleasant change yeah I know I'm not hoping or if anything all those reasons are just making it better for pay out I'll switch if I can find some better just like we talk about writing copy or brand name like companies and name a lot of friends and stuff I got a lady you got me at my jokes in the room it's a 7/10 you gotta beat it in the in the writers room what's going on I'm glad you're on the podcast it's a little hectic throw out this you that everything is throw out all your your handles for for the people Instagram all that stuff usually workbench TV I think on Instagram were no twitters workbench_TV because there's some weird Canadian like workbench DIY program that's got that yet and when you search for the workbench are getting a lot of workbench tutorials how to make a workbench, then silly little dancer putting my graphic designer put in animation tutorial now you want tutorial though it is graphic design animation motion okay it's want to clarify everything Eric did a lot of research before names I told him I intentionally don't do research so I can ask the questions of people when we actually do that on purpose because with Alexa just because he's lazy we will follow me, shut it gave me hope it can be both work well for both suit and tell me about a wide you started what is it you know give me the who what when where why all that well first I was having, slow year click two years ago my main business builder party so would you like graphics animation production all the stuff and so I was like you know it is time to come to share some of my knowledge the people himself I wanted to like a long time ago there's like some people to restart noun is like a man I could do that you know you have and just at the time is like I didn't have the time to do it and that just wasn't the right time I guess for it and there's all this like beginner stuff that didn't exist when I'd started so, what I wanted to do but then all of the market, filled up and do that so I figured I just start to make more advanced tutorials that for the stuff that I'd want to see that was another interesting it's like the Tyco's telling Damien something about they should be doing a podcast similar to this is nothing like two years ago I was telling yeah more as a recruiting tool I think to get younger people to follow over and then you can maybe you develop a relationship with some of these people that are into it but that's that's interesting how that kind of parallel thinking happened and were not even what 7 miles away were your in South Tampa right will assimilate no head of the murder of the murder capital your my hood yeah that's what I was just pitching about trying to sell our house and buy a new one contingent on a stone house that serial killer just the light went on your day 35 grand on the house price so that you will yeah I mean obviously it sucks but it's also kind of interesting way it's like here like Ford motors the news and like that's like not even a weekend in Chicago I'll try to keep a rant pretty quick but but I did journalism this twofold why this was a disaster of an investigation a the the churlish function should be they should be ashamed of themselves they should be flocking there should be some kind of punishment for them for sensationalizing this made it five times worse than it needed to be they called a serial killer before it is technically a serial killer I think I need is a take three I think thickly three I think I got back I go with the major league and the hum of the the speech is all going okay right three that's a winning streak or a heart attack that's my role at least and it was just at when they had to kills it was just a bus stop that was similar that was it to so you really move around MO yet there's no end there is no like he left the pentagram is yet you have all the fun puzzles and things that they normally leave around for the cops just to do that's a sociopath I bet he was on pipette there's some pharmaceutical involvement I think I bet opiates because that does change your brain chemistry anyway were getting down to a sloppy road the other part of that is PR will this all will come back and into the fold PR date the Police Department dictated this message so poorly that they just kept leaving it open ended like they wanted to write a TV show on it like they were like the truth either this guy on video he's he's either doing a job he's either Jazzercise and through the neighborhood like gave this like ridiculous in areas like or use a similar white skin is like why did you do press conference of this like this makes no sense real quick I just think that your audience is probably China figure at this moment how drugs opiates and graphic design are all gonna come back together that's the magic of me all dovetail back because my eyebrow went straight up like Dragon like what good your voice of the people today that so as to do dictating your message right I think chosen a good job of that type I went through and all I went back in your catalog before he started his I want to see what it looked like in the beginning you channel the reason we start talking is like you did a humble pride post like hey we get 10,000 subscribers on site ownership I his armor looking out a while ago and knows that this is really cool I on the fly have to do a lot of graphic design stuff like smaller stuff so I can send it to a good designer like and you are Damien really do it I'll get the concept down but sometimes I said I need tutorials and you can burn funk and hours trying to find like a good stuff and know it's learning how to do some more reading about earlier today the just how to take a logo make a white me like I have is like I was trying to do this for a while and then I looked it was like a minute video as I just change that utilized the site that is it in Photoshop okay media that's what is yeah said you'll never make it at the end. But so it dovetails back is your your your creating a brand through this on a passion project not too dissimilar from what were trying to do with this podcast a little bit were you know we don't know what's in a come of it we'd like should initiate and talk a little business gazettes mainly were any if I went to a dinner party the conversation would somehow get over there anyway which my wife hates but somehow yet your business is life that will mean it's in a lot of it's a small medium business that's life no for a lot of business owner Damien over there look it's it consumes everything his wife's business owner to it's it's a lot in your conversation because sometimes you can come and go help oh you should be doing this this and this is his wife the bad stylus jingo oh you should do you with the shellac nails you should get some Moroccan oil put in the hair yeah I know my hair stuff good her words meant that I was in the salon industry man I know about you want to start slowing off talking I'll rip that ship how did I know price per square foot I know any chairs you need I know the commission rates all that ship you should put a runway in their red carpet so after they're done you look in your eye right now I'm excited to start here decided what that Ceará will try to record the safety and this is interprofessional now we know as I was attempting Internet database yet and it's bad love aggregates artifacting and freezing so there sometimes at your max and drumming out for the lands headroom the show for everybody who is not born after 1990 something to do that hacked into the TV station was that no Max Headroom is I don't know what it is like the Nobel Pepsi commercial guy like accent room that was that roof that yeah they did there was something that that you guys look like Chicago yes somebody like contacting the local TV stand here but there was a mass I got SSRI so yes you got pretty much right there looks okay on the prowl for knowing that random reason hello good underwriters distributes up parcels of the will they also admit Noblesville spoofed it in back to the future when the Ronald Reagan got up and like I run away and they did the whole little thing when we first goes into the future Café I to retro Café yeah, some random kid in there I think assault not too long ago the thing with Elijah when Elijah wasn't out yet and had the arcade ghetto yeah we're having your hands yeah that's the fun part I like watching old movies over again is really out hey that's that guy that I know forgot about. He made it will happen the guy next to him that he didn't suck Kirsten Dunst and Jumanji the day about 10 years whatever it is we know the old and the kanji will swear to say we'll just see the new one they just shrug her down I fulfill I will was cheaper to buy on Amazon for the kids want the original data bungee things like how I got it is what I like a lot in it yeah yeah whatever is not to give up because while it is when the like where's the rock I heard one of the Kevin Hart I heard it's really good actually it is is it you saw kids note no need for kids to watch but herself has caring community, is that redhead from a Doctor Who and also plays Gomorrah and battles of cardiology or some parties I guess she's the blue haired blue chick in guarding the value of the really like the sister nebula sorry nebulae yeah yeah that's it that's conflicted Gavin, hot redhead I'm not into redhead sorry I decide not to ginger kinda guy no fence so my thing, I'm too pale or too dark something about and I hear you if you talk too much so that's what character can't say to the dark why is it just to play it safe I say to paling is that you Darnell you can't that's legal is able to kill I thought this is not telling you I know what I find my wiener gets a Boner for certain things like open you up here right this is not a PC show by any means so and I'm not anything terrible I don't say I'm hating anybody just the wiener wants with the wind once it's okay can you be more click here if you're in the DVD AA like that's your yesterday Outlook might might my wife is ill or find me trying to double in my wife is her, she's like some light bright and damn near white so I don't know what I thought about her hellos and then some. BII can't learn all these acronyms and what you're talking about is a real test for one and were shoehorning here to talk about Dixon balls for 15 minutes now that I thought of it like that with you Dick and balls that he instinctively meals back-and-forth that we will try to edit this psychologist Dick and balls in business that duplicates the goal and maybe a spinoff it works for me like member shoehorning this Internet and a very hectic day Eric's a little stressed as a my is finding serenity that's my nonstress time yeah this is the fight this is gone silly topics yeah that's what we have yoga mats and ship over there and I want to get a funky punching bag thank you we can hang one thing let me think yes anymore Justice just bagged 30 seconds just if I can punch something I thought I think it be cathartic to a definite yes drive-by punch what you got all that stuff is just one Pam okay I feel better now that you like a speed bag and it was good closer it got hit on a nice thought of that those are so noisy it's true that these guys next to a city record will I can hear light them on a conference call behind us so it's you know the walls are thin already use that glass to the wall technique Yahoo that there can hear everything I just take a ceiling tile and Dragon leave eight trying to take all day son all day will do that with this I I have a couple pointers like that that it wrote down Wells Fargo not currently sponsored by Dragon dictate I'm in love Dragon dictate I've got no qualms about it there not a sponsor we just want to give out good things that are good you know good things that are good yeah it makes a wedding but it works good with use mu.com is reporting stuff that's a good thing that's good man log got all his own pilot that I write you down for the next day you really think so don't worry I will be in the show notes in the blog post I forget to put up Jonah 2 yeah I know one thing when asked about we just a tinfoil hat podcast which is conspiracy theory podcast Assam Tripoli the Gotland listeners but also like crazy listeners and Eric and I've been looking through the comments independent of each other talking about it we both went through all floors and ice just got forward one night start answering a bunch of find him and I was looking at yours and theirs so me people whining about like this is to know can you slow it down it's like beachfront composite like pause the video it's in the video tutorial positive actually had some people tell me before like a long time and I like one commenter lowers like that that YouTube is a feature really slow down the video I was disabled I do have speed summary three was likely a watch of it is only capturing the mounding of native English speakers ligaments address you can write something like the next slick person that said that to me obviously just like that we could watch and we have to be you podcast it has to be nobody sounds like I do not accident a lot like that but no pill what I'm I'm talking more one I hope yeah what have is that there was a loud ITS wrong how might this pleases inkwell is that purple drink what's the weirdest thing that's come out of you doing this you been doing for two years passion project side project kinda like I am guessing it's similar because we did this because it's like I got some to say about I got all this information I feel like and I like I like giving advice to people that don't ask for credit but I also like interviewing people right like heaven old buddies come in industries initiate what's what's we're think about it comments or weird messages are you know any that I think that's interesting that you come around the world people are using it which is I saw you had some kind of French translation may be on one of them oh that there was a guy that had done it to tour… Were Willie did it before I did I didn't know existed some bills told me about it so was in French so thankfully had taken some French I was able to figure out what he did 09 there's a better version of something I did so I incorporate that into the download for no I think that's cool I mean we talk about you know a lot of the stuff are doing like, Jesus did like the universal language or saying anything so work or start to think of everything in the context of life right how can we make a little bit more global it's not a much more effort you know but you're at your tutorials you don't really need the audio right sometimes you do but it's harder I'd say probably only because I don't do step-by-step so I can escape a lot of things if you're not in aftereffects user like like a beginner's like I really get all of the things I'm doing usually yeah but in its and is a narrow audience on yeah if you're if you're advanced enough you could probably pick up some stuff sometimes I don't really explain what things are exactly like a minute settings guide I hate when people just while circular all the time I get like reels from people or whatever different ways that worked and it's like okay like I copied a tutorial like I did this like he doesn't know what he is doing disease is not taking the thing in advancing it is just taking something with wheels did in presenting that it in a different way that the zoning assigned something so everybody have all like this you guys have to collaborate so much with other video production companies animation Studios whatever so you when you're getting a file all the default settings are all wacky or they have a way of doing stuff isn't notices its world people present in the work like the stuff that I see from people like you can pick out if you've seen like there's a huge guide video copilot Andrew Kramer he does like these just crazy tutorials only in you see his stuff and people real-time like this is this likely presented to like it is my work on it no that's not yours you know they are doing the tutorial and then think about it and what the rent because they technically did it place I used to work at where the creative director was asking us I mean this happens everywhere I've seen other people tell the same story but basically Craig Dir. comes in is okay we just think of these these people you looking to hire somebody and then it's like well that's an inter-grammar tutorial so and it soon as that happened in the in the Place I was at initially took the DVD's of that long ago of the computer and just throw trash like that is immediately is like no well he sent whelming to the Google reversed something searched I know that was another I know that prevalent like I figured like I figured like the stand-up comedy community were like if you steal jokes basically what that like a child will not exactly stolen like it's like if somebody well I mean I guess in common it's a little different because in comedy the punch line is always the portal and there's not really like however you'd tell it it changing what it's knowing that it's it's it's a very similar because you can have a premise right that is only unique to that person right that's how a lot of these guys get caught one thing is what people think is that they can go off and tell the joke differently and that that's a different thing right but so it is the same but I'm saying it's same and different yeah and calmly they get way more like shut down on doing and in our world it's more like older, did something a little different than that you know it's it's knock down yeah little bit it's all because you have to you your iterations count and yours were czars are just like you just building to something where there are whiffs of tartar comics you know you you're working on a bit to make it tight where is Joel's final thing if you like the graphic designer for lack of a better term like graphic design community they they like seeing the iterations in the process allow the touch her right the flip if I can chime in one of the main thing especially if the just a little advice anybody out there who is doing things that they know they have Andrew Kramer or whatever other tutorials out there you're more than welcome to take that material learned from it do it and then do something as simple as go and shoot your own footage and do the same affect on your own footage and lease that shows that you an instant how to apply the effect and I think that that's when the main things that I specimen graphic designers come and play it's almost similar as someone you know what happens in music and as you have is a lot of industry people in music and she liked it might be McNally actually got like five samples and three loops that already came with the package you didn't really create anything unique you may have rearranged a slightly different but yet totally understand what that means is mean and that's and it's a it happens most special and new budding graphic artist they they that's their education they know they get it from from online and they start hot expand upon and I think that's one of the bigger things that I think on that it's overlooked even Andrew Kramer and yourselves on strong workbench always pushing people to go I go take this and apply to your project at least let me see it in an application as opposed to just being quite literally it's the exact same effect that's partly to why I'll get some complaints were once lowered some is like okay you show me from the beginning or what did you do for this waiver unless a click of a really important setting American go often and say yeah okay the setting is 50 for this in 20 for that because then you're not learning how to use it and the point is to take what I make and expand upon it that's kind like us to watch tutorials nowadays like some else comes up something interesting even if it's something I know like a lot of times if I have some down time I watch it because sometimes I'll pick up a little piece of something that they didn't like I didn't even do that were in a like whatever like because even if you're the meekest person you know you still have some no insight in the shirt or something sure no I died I think that's what YouTube is really great for is I that we learn we have to use all the time because it's stay here will they know and we handle so many different services you know so it's like it's yes there is regular green fire you didn't know like you know what you would've heard outside of work and stuff like your at your house like oh okay this like peace in my toilet broke what do I do to fix that and some is like hey here's this exact model of toilet this is the handle that nicotine elixirs like we manage the stuff that we may sketch were very proud about that we didn't put much behind it but we made a sketch like how to be a man sketch toilet because we grew up in this era were like were not handy and definitely and almost embarrassingly have to look up how like how to properly spell your dad or something will you try it first and you break everything and then go back how to feel that you were slightly taken apart and you break the thing that you need you like oh now I know how this works but it's broken every time and then yeah wife pitches at you in this like an okay I won't buy a new one but liked on the figure this out (about what does it mean Adobe After Effects seems like it's like limitless units potential for manipulation sort of thing and Eric actually Eric's videoconference my ex-wife just to give an ex-wife really don't have fever and ex-wife chose man I got Jesus Christ lately ever life will relive IK wow not look I was looking at your site Joe and I looked at the blog and it was like literally the first sentence I'm lost I can't like I thought about looking in the video graphic design stuff and then it was like five minutes and I was like no I can't do this is this is a lament different there there are some simple stuff that that last post is actually kind of comforted okay no known stones pretty computer at a time on number format yeah things okay okay looks really because for some reason I don't know why saw a lot of stuff I do like programming related and as I used to do some of that and what's what's annoyed me about aftereffect sometimes there sometimes like functions in it that you need that you don't have the better like a single function in another language like number format like PHP which is that some bad a lot of stuff in it's like number format this number you go in it is outlining a number with buildings in it yet although Prelude met here you'd like at least as far as I know maybe it's in there somewhere I don't know but like I had actually reverse engineer how to build that junction was on St. like even you you're making these videos you know what you're doing and you have to go reverse engineer Samuel sometimes I have to learn stuff and some you know like other times there's people way smarter than me that figure out things to yeah yeah problem-solving at the end of the day it's it it's really a similar process am sure to for figuring out any difficult process problem whatever that's why life like trying to do stuff that's outside my zone to help that problem so as as you grow to yeah because it all go okay watching this tutorial on how to do grout for my tile actually what subconsciously helps me figure out how to use software in reverse engineer from there or apply I need that grout fresh fresh and flush against the tile just like we need this design to be flush just you know for whatever reason it will help me contextualize a lot and want to learn it as a man you'll throw that info out as soon as you can know God yes now I grab you guys especially to some other guy is just as many of the applicant been an expert in it oh yeah I own a trial business for last year hashtag that God did all day yeah now if I more if I'm doing the middle the night I'm just by myself like just listen to podcasts just like this Friday night when doing more hundred percent on the posted lightly what I do you guys suggest feels like that old little Simpson joker were like Marge's learning piano just like it just teaching piano 2 inches like I said that they wanted 11 lesson ahead of the kids basically like what is I feel like that's a lot of a lot of management nowadays just because were to spread out just, everything so segmented fragmented out from a management standpoint discussed the Internet box with everybody's head there's too much school stuff out trying to think of the worst a recorded voice and I said I lost applying as live video interrupted that's fine whatever the reason I'm going to yeah that's what the producer does sit here and inform you of the situation will we may have one coming up later following her over there. You write it only to close over there like putting together yeah the tubes are it's me know it's not a will and do it I understand I'm I'm in the process of trying to get it to the point we get used to having this kind of a situation on the backend because I would love for this Texaco no ocean here behind the classroom went to the roof to have the talent just me on how we piping in your earphones always like yeah Robert quivers out further like they're doing that thing are you just part echoing what he said but just like a live fraction of a second later so messily break their people audiences love that audiences love the audio that Don is a doubles okay get my children but all in all that's that's the worst in Prague a Mother's Day gift or gift if the copy the person right in front of you it's like a warm-up game and my this is this is the worst okay yeah that's what kids do the focal me yeah this did not touch you yeah putting it free country brought Jeffrey country free country that means on the deck he said it's a free country never push you yeah anything about that free country pitch right to bear arms my power arms whether or not I will yard and drumming is working on that how I was going for the dead pine thousand and although I was just trying to get all the way to bear arms basically I said I queued up for five minutes oh yeah oh yeah I got an offer one day the full circle with all the others are talking live earlier should do my daily diary touch back to it as you have wakes up and set beforehand like your you to say it oh well like way way before you worry in this weird phrase and see if I can sell it won't last year my New Year's resolution was to say Kirsty more and so I think I've done a good job and it's in the lexicon outside of the poor said that like three or four times a been here in a good because it's now it's woven into my vernacular it is the Meebo was named earthy yeah yeah you need to name it something so why not maybe together looks like McCarthy it does I cancel the slogan for this podcast should be good with the advice I think but I think you get a totally different audience sweat equity well after the pragmatic but pragmatic girth he advises that case went by the movie so what tell us what tell us about the industry what's going on how about this habit give advice 10 years younger you that wanted to get into this time travel give advice yourself for you or you just taught given advice to classrooms read really start learn is the start of the environmental I've probably stolen from somebody am sure but now it's it's parallel theory like Seth Godin noon ship and or was really a look at things just start now we don't listen we don't listen to those those Silicon Valley anticancer types that are those higher up business guys that's why we created this actually one like anti-Tim Ferris here so your maybe you can't like it everything you one like for exactly that's about it seriously a decent anointment it also goes or I listen to all the software podcasting to be like or I just get like seven of your friends that are billionaires then you sit know why commentator conference room and wrote a book on how to manage her $80,000 a month pharmaceutical business yeah thanks for the advice Tim swing five people's likelihood is make a product yeah okay which one tell me so this that's why I go so specific and like mu.com reference or some like that because there is it it sounds jilted sometimes but it it it I heard Colin Quinn say's specificity is the language of the universal wrote that down and remembered it I really like that because I feel like my the way I look at comedy and a lot of the communication and language I try to be overly specific unnecessarily because it's kind of funny or sometimes but I do that sometimes even workbench doctors yeah yeah it's fun what so just start now you have the motivation to do it my my first thing I know I know nothing about how to start to want to be this kind of artist I would say I tried to find like a Mashable class or something get that bait Linda Gladden limit as far as I can as a prism I'm thinking I'm thinking of when I was when I had this mindset to do workbench stuff right I was like I was Artie kind of in it and I'm thinking like the time is whenever you have it in the lake it's now right right yeah it's an appendage to what you're doing already like this podcast is timing cost-effective and it's a good way to get her voice out and literally don't have to spend that many hours a week or so it's not and it's fine so it's not that bad and I'm sure when you start seeing results of people, subscribing that's when it kind of felt fun you know effluent is the first part of doing like some kind of like content strategy like this even if it's not like focused on making money anything it it's that thing of like your print out there for a while lit and unless you have a big budget to put add money or some it's just to be like I am sending us 100 views that are under a message in a bottle for me to do with how it is I started as I started action video instead of YouTube so I started putting stuff up on there and I'm like very cool and it actually got a decent amount of use I know what the deal is with that but just didn't feel like the right type of place I've made a suggestion to go to me I was acting as an Internet for me on the hooves man they just bought that camera company live stream mix bottom out they want to be the third player now and is Facebook's down number two I think video rights which might be three I don't know but as far as like like not watching video games video some places blows my mind that it could be threatened if I can blows my life that is fine. It's insane kids these days that they're actually good about people doing leave and start unit is random stuff and which like all sorts of stuff like I said I have these very very Blake takes on different things and YouTube and like you know if a 3YI like when I went to censor yourself you will hear psychotic artist to its anatomy and I mean like a wimp or hoax everyone yeah me that all porn set yeah okay everything is nothing here that I was kind yeah that's in a separate graphic video right here in your normal everyday you know what are your you're like nine you know yeah yeah whatever yeah so that's what else is on twitch there's a there's people like I watched the granted I don't want to let stuff on twitch by know they have switch usually watching on YouTube because I'm older I guess I will and I'm not there at like 6 o'clock when people doing things like you do that I watch that does he make things this child hold I like to make stuff so he does switch dreams and stuff and then there's a guy that does like these prop making things like reprints and phone stuff and that's punish props and he does stuff on there as well though at times catch people's live stream stuff later on but I'm not on twitch watching it but it's a content that was generated therein so you go on YouTube to go to twitch one I'm usually usually people posting a shortened version of it let Mrs. know I'm scribbling literally hours I don't usually have three hours worth the time to yet we but we will sit there and we were trying to figure out a process to there's I think I will be asked if we start using that as a live broadcasting software we like that the Meebo camera supposed to be able to get you on a few streams at a time but they have some weird thing were like you can either do Facebook live only or you can do YouTube and and for me at the same time and so it's like okay but you know ideally you want to have the video up on all three I say but nobody like do not take checking YouTube and DiMeo like to check Facebook so going live on Facebook makes we don't sense but remember we just a tinfoil hat and they get us in every time like I subscribed a workbench their channel every time you post the video I get an email notification right under the Rome open accidentally you're in you're more like this easily on Facebook more people you check that will always me taking were not going on for me oh to see what's new on mimeo for me as a profession where it makes sense for that it makes sense for I know the half of what we talked about as a hard very unlimited in the way it was like I feel like that's for finished work that's like how it feels but maybe that's all you survey it has to be like cures like real professional video they are naturally separate themselves from my main business stuff is like my main actual company workers on their W a means I would if I'm right now playing armchair quarterback I'd say just make just take everything you've done on that channel and just uploaded to mimeo and it's all good with the keywords and all that stuff all that stuff helps in the e-learning thing is really what they're focusing on so like premium premium subscription model stuff that happens that that like a FC that come along that I don't want people have to like pay for things unless it's specific like is there a subscription that people can just like sign up to look at YouTube rather than go to Freeman the freemium strategy which is a lot of apps do it right so you you get a nap it's free but like to really use it you gotta pay for box or whatever it is it hey it's the same thing the podcast or starting your concern see that a lot more Sam Tripoli was telling us he does bonus content and then for anybody that does patriot on donations which I guess is I saw a PayPal button on yours yet I could have paid his patrons way better now for one reason that such a good think of do as I feel like sometimes my patron I struggle actually like get like the word tears and stuff done just just because a lot of times Kleinwort comes in and then I have to do that yeah I mean I told John Jacobs who was on tinfoil podcast just had a album come out I was like look you want organic an organic strategy it's a little corny but you should anybody buys your album and they screenshot it send it to you should freestyle the name on my Facebook live people love that and they would share it it would get the help on that on their in is not doing what you know comedian I didn't follow through his own doubts deftly done to look like that, like wind over the old spice was doing the the old spice guy was like showing out people like 10 years ago but oh yeah, that if you like you can tweet to my thing at a time and like everyone so I like you they pick somebody and they had him dutifully 24 hours me like that like customize videos toward little pieces it's it's okay could you do this in the whatever production team I don't know they must have liked some just a team stuff oh yeah he was that they like pop it out like immediately oh that pride was the program when I was like people like had specific supplicating to do a video would like a toothbrush in a workmanlike like a 24 hour film fest but it was like only a guy in Terry Cruz knows the Isaiah Mustapha order when you know the other guys after right is right I told him to get rid of commitment I know I'm with you I should to double back in? This is like what I guess try to think which way to go with this what you want to do with this like what you what are you getting out of having this channel I think I I would see that is like you can look at it like a freemium model like like you're doing right eventually you're gonna want to try to get something financially out of it may be direct or indirect is that'll make it better yeah I mean so right now I kind of it's kind of somewhat of a vehicle for other things I have like it like the products inscriptions in the cell and molecular stuff but at the same time a muscle thinking of doing more like specific tutorial play groupings so where is right now making all the tutorials and I'm never to stop doing those free leases far as I can right now but those will always be there you know but the other something of like an actual like a tutorial series or some like that where it actually I can sell that as a unit yeah that's way single tutorial probably not get sold but I mean Jill one specific thing with 10 different managers showing everything they need to know is it so there goes all those anymore I ran those be more from the ground up versus my normal like here's the thing we have to either later this I do and that's it you know little bit more basic stuff you talk about what had not even that exactly basic but like I say it with one of the one something of doing his expression tutorial or expression series and I'm thinking of doing that to where we start from the beginning and it goes in a more like programming in depth like here's what you would do this and whatever you know versus like hey this is cool affect saga expression as this is like a snippet of code and aftereffects that you can use it to like run other things basically like to thank you for telling love with you like Eric got it the only link things together or dynamiting bitcoin what I wish I've missed out on that pretty heavily it's kind of like you can take some have liked for controls of you can bring up your own control to control multiple layers of different things there really powerful you do a lot of stuff with it that's kind of convert topic to actually specifically explain and like one now how do better under five cents IR Inc. in your elevator and yeah write it up yet what I mean that's why we this is the podcasts good you can kinda take the time to explain something that's a little confusing that's why you're doing these videos it's it's hard to I we do video for almost everything now like I don't want to do any phone calls with clients because this is so much visual stuff and it's like now now let's do phone I'll go now let's just reschedule it because it's not you can try to explain to me like guess some things in the talking like this create a ruling, is to help you, Howdy pixels we talk about the early pixels right well you know never that, that's the measurement you use pocket pocket five it is these things up there on what you like to now turn on speaking of in the camera like so I also production stuff and having having those around my house is great but then I'm watching the dictatorial and like color grading and that she's talking to me like what you talking I like the this morning I was watching something about collaborating in and she's like okay so were to repair this thing like prepare what are you talking about I turn mine off yeah it's it's hard my kids see the file, change the names of the notes I can think of something else like Beyoncé my uncle had ever detached his door from it because people if you can eat if you are outside you said open deluxe open Gloriana jet open a door ceiling again, and detach the snow yet he has his whole house Morehouse hooked up to the Lexan problem was that he was a humongous queue society like let's open the door and open the door from the thought of Isaac this is not good now you baby girl it's been well hey baby girl.you doing about I can't believe it took this long to get keyless entry door houses like what we had our car for 15 years I said I go for the stupid metal key in my house, I agree right but always late and I think always get the one like we've got technologies in a failure at some point so get the analog, you can always put the key and if you need to that we have a thumbprint one fingerprint one and I'm like this thing to break I want something that hasn't punch code I thought finger print and then also an addict glory hole for your key because that's my theory with all like that, smart home stuff if I can't turn on the lights physically that I don't want to have a yeah my app to do it. Let's carry I could I feel like I have bad luck with a lot of stuff to do and it'll break down and the moment you need it the most have had that happen to me a couple times were used have a wink that was controlling stuff. It's a hub okay it's like all the other that she went had Home Depot to get like loud laugh I do since then live in Like that I'll actually have since been able to put that into my Phillips you set up which is nice that works like instantly and great but the week one would like fail at random times and latency for the morning like a camera to go to sleep a good turn off lights and it just doesn't yeah like okay great I like the power goes off and for some reason it set to automatically like turn them on slick power is off you I do like I do like this I use I have TTT for a lot of that and I do we have the Phillips you in our place for a few lights and I like I like that it will turn the lights red if there's like a smoke detector goes off were there or something like that you take in warmth or chicken gas station chicken warm bread whatever fried chicken we have laying around it interests automatically turn to that that this martyrdom stuff scares me that it's kind of why we I don't have one of the any of the voice activated things at her house I'm fine with that here is God knows what she thinks we talk about in this room when the vice will verify the calyx profile please yeah know they got a dossier on is what I mean they can't really advertise to us because it's so were so random over the paragraph and I don't think they did like in one sentence will talk about Lexi sleep that what is sensory deprivation tank and like great cubes you know that's going to call that guy's attached is a business that is how far we in here what's the minute count for producer think we gotta wrap it up in the minutes or something here that tells you that Jesus go to the letter sounds like you're done and I think we started at, 20 I think were 45 ends up 40 minutes boom I found it any advice just made that up like that fixed it if you any advice you want to give out there anything short you want to throw out there that I didn't pre-ask you what you want to talk about like a good host would anything in your industry any or reduce pitch about some if you want me like I said before tubes copying people that's a big thing you know I feel like there's a lot of people that just some kids like it because my wife the teacher right so a lot of times the the there is the you get like the two groups I feel like now there's like kids that really want to learn something in there like driven to you know do whatever and then you are, I guess is probably true of all generations but in whatever way I see now being old 34-year-old so if your you have these other people that basically want to been given to them now like and if I feel it's a little bit more than when I was a kid probably because when I was a kid he had let go to an encyclopedia or you know whatever the lake gets information and now it's just like people just like old you didn't tell me exactly how to do it you know and and I've that's kind of what my tutorials are kind of geared to not do look, I want to know the reason though because I think it's frustrating to double back when you're in the middle of that right now the reason is that you learn one way and the other way you don't learn like if you you either learn how to get information or you learn how to like figure out how to get information so you think the speed that common I saw was like why can't you tell might slow it down and no break everything down you think more Darwinism like that's just half sometimes as people are people that are learning in on their there just new to it they don't understand the people that leave comments now is the final test this I don't know the board laying out three comments on YouTube his comments on YouTube narcissistic I had to read the ones were never on arms at every site I think a reply to pretty much everybody I replied nicely and the guy the try to accuse me of actually like stealing some else's tutorial or something 1000 interesting where is basically just like okay so people can have the same idea that's not loud apparently and I'm supposed to know what everybody else in the tutorial spaces that were occasionally has some data set this is my reply was like okay will assuming I stole this one what about the other like 70 done at that time right what about that that the other guy 70 guys like was like people commenting on when I did like 60 back or something like what okay they probably saw one the copied of you that I think you got it okay yeah I've had comedian still my material and I don't there's not much you can do about it except confront them but usually I they die out anyway yeah and I don't I'm not worried about it and now lives I've seen people that are basically like within a few days posted to the world that similar to mine is different enough or whatever but I'm like I don't care yeah yeah it's funny to read their comment silicone man you're the only person on YouTube doing the stuff it's like that's funny because I get that sink in a comment like Virgo that we had people accusing us or throwing up illuminati gang signs during the podcast address like that the likely like that I don't know I don't know really what I was reading a lot of the stuff left will follow to us, like I'm not big on social justice stuff obviously got really a thing whatever but anyway yeah one thing is really feeling all right one thing is funny is that you said you see the thing if you were doing this like okay oh will do everything under the now everything I know it looks like wipeout like they like so some of the people that were like in this thing we visited a watch on YouTube is his name is that somehow it all okay humble some black eye and a couple other people like any work you really did like this like dealer's like the slick white power thing is like a joke you know like and but they got it like actually get news on it like you were calling this like some kind of whites only making the symbol the index after the other three fingers up yeah you don't want to lick you the okay dive symbol you know like that okay Moji just turns out that yeah the other for the penal perfect whatever but I thought you're going to go on the one is the game that came back from our middle school early high school days is you can take the okay you put it on your thigh whatever Melissa has people your bell ever if someone looks at it get to punch in the stupid ship I never initially combine that together it's dark back like Smirnov whatever the kneeling Smirnov nice that I went back to its back than the national championship photo of Alabama one guy was for the players is doing it which is where ever he that's like an 18-year-old kid doesn't know at school if all right dad I think it's funny there's a people doing it I don't have a type of super professional meeting at the White House meeting people there to have fun it that I mean it's funny but you know all I fall is like 50 or barstool sports like Friday old room science Yep again I got a question so how do you manage expectations for some of the new artist that you meet as far as getting into the industry I don't think it's really think people have a lot of like doom and gloom unlike other semi people doing it whatever but there's not so many good people so like a lot of times that I am trying to get in I get I get a lot of work coming in and then I have nobody to farm it to know because a lot of times it's just there's nobody good around you know you just have to be like like hone your skills don't just say oh well I don't use aftereffect so here you go you know like you can't really have the idea that people should just be giving you money you know and in you just have to kind of like just like learners that you know you cannot sit there and after effects and like yeah or wherever programmer using phenolics and their actually actively learning and experimenting and that you're not really gonna grow to the level that you working late you know get extra work and stuff you know because otherwise you're just doing whatever belts does so you're just taking that basil yeah you know it's obvious it's a prerequisite that you know this program in order to make stuff but you need to like work on it more in order to learn things about it have talent you deftly need talent yeah I mean yeah I have an eye for the best person is or talented enough you there's nothing I'm on called the mow grass like whatever it's hashtag motion design.com and that's there's a lot of like people hanging out in there and sharing knowledge about different things and I feel like I've got a lot of stuff no just from them and just you know people have liked met online you know it okay want to do this work and sometimes even people send me an idea for tutorial that way okay I don't do tutorials but you and I can do whatever and I shot a mountain I can assure what they have so I think I think you need to get I saw that you've added yourself in the beginning of as intro I think Geico picture-in-picture have your your you countries to shot you are doing it sure, then I get that I get the problem of well I do like cuts because I'm try to keep them short so that was my other goal when I first heard it was like really keeping him shortly I got tired of twirl that like 40 minutes long in the show like the same thing also in three minutes notes like Goldmine the cuts are thinking on the front they understand that your skip and I'm saying I ran inside should you do picture-in-picture and have you in the time a tiny box of bottom just so they don't know gastric almost branding yourself a little bit in a way you couldn't and I don't have to record yourself at the exact same time searching her cut down there again when you're just doing a voiceover you sure you could but mean you can do OB we started doing it with the how to tutorials we do website for someone which would shoot like seven of those and will I want to mess around with that OBS picture-in-picture thing so that our thing is we want to show them there's a human behind this living I did and it didn't intro that's what started doing I think you can intro but I might actually do a little like a cutaway because that might be a little easier for me to shoehorn into the way I do everything that's kind of how I'm planning on doing that one series is a guy who's watermark your face at the thought of the bug cut out yeah that IBM gets the job whatever it is I think I think you are workbench workbenches you kind of thing now but is that things like you may develop something a couple years down the line that you are expert for this intermediate to advanced area sure they work. People may want to book you workbench we have a we talked about with this like there's opportunities for us to do business kinda commie business stuff I we got a role or producer showing cue cards it says 57+ we got we got a lot about you a lot a bunch a lot a bunch of work to do picture coming on and anything else you know Damon now Matt is fun bossing your mouth back here I like I like having you as the produce. Yeah and I is inviting whiteboard and now as put in a request for whiteboards and sharpies and so will have and will have the display screen you see that professionalism here that audio jack going yeah yeah
On this episode of the The ProGuide, Steve Forde - Product Manager for Adobe After Effects - shares what influencing the direction on a major piece of software is like, how they decide what features get added, and what role the community plays.