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Today we are talking about Drupal CMS Media Management, How media management has evolved, and Why managing our media is so important with our guest Tony Barker. We'll also cover URL Embed as our module of the week. For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/479 Topics What do we mean by media management in Drupal CMS How is it different from media in Drupal today Why is media management important How are you applying these changes to Drupal What phase are you in Will this be ready for Drupal CMS release in January What types of advanced media will supported Do you see it growing to replace some DAMs Are there future goals How did you get involved How can people get involved Resources Track 15 Proposal for Media Management Issue to publish research on other CMS and the questionnaire results Vision for media management https://www.drupal.org/project/drupal_cms/issues/3488393 Contributed module file upload field for media https://www.drupal.org/project/media_widget and these related modules https://www.drupal.org/project/media_link https://www.drupal.org/project/media_remote_embed Slack: #starshot-media-management and #starshot Drupal Core strategy for 2025-2028 Guests Tony Barker - annertech.com tonypaulbarker Hosts Nic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi Suzanne Dergacheva - evolvingweb.com pixelite MOTW Correspondent Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu Brief description: Have you ever wanted a simple way to insert oEmbed content on your Drupal site? There's a module for that. Module name/project name: URL Embed Brief history How old: created in Sep 2014 by the venerable Dave Reid, though recent releases are by Mark Fullmer of the University of Texas at Austin Versions available: 2.0.0-alpha3 and 3.0.0-beta1, the latter of which works with Drupal 10.1 or 11. That said, it does declare a dependency on the Embed project, which unfortunately doesn't yet have a Drupal 11-ready release Maintainership Actively maintained Security coverage technically, but needs a stable release Test coverage Documentation guide Number of open issues: 63 open issues, 4 of which are bugs against the current branch Usage stats: 7,088 sites Module features and usage A content creator using this module only needs to provide a URL to the content they want to embed, as the name suggests The module provides both a CKEditor plugin and a formatter for link fields. Note that you will also need to enable a provided filter plugin for any text formats where you want users to use the CKEditor button Probably the critical distinction between how this module works and other elements of the media system is that this bypasses the media library, and as such is better suited to “one off” uses of remote content like videos, social media posts, and more It's also worth mentioning that the module provides a hook to modify the parameters that will be passed to the oEmbed host, for example to set the number of posts to return from Twitter I could definitely see this as a valuable addition to the Event Platform that we've talked about previously on the podcast, but the lack of a Drupal 11-ready release for the Embed module is an obvious concern. So, if any of our listeners want to take that on, it would be a valuable contribution to the community
In this episode, Cal Henderson (Co-Founder & CTO @ Slack) and Maria Kazandjieva (Co-Founder @ Graft) discuss strategies for how to be a force multiplier within your organization! They cover Cal's leadership journey & the early days of Slack, how to identify lateral inflection points, aligning your people throughout periods of change, tips for personal retrospectives on where you invest your time, and more. Additionally, Cal & Maria share plenty of frameworks for both identifying if you are currently a force multiplier & how to identify opportunities to inspire productivity in others.This is a featured session from ELC Annual 2022 - check out all of the sessions here: elc.community/public/contentABOUT CAL HENDERSONCal Henderson (@iamcal) is the co-founder and CTO of Slack. He oversees Slack's world-class engineering team and sets the technical vision for the company.In 2019, he was named a Fortune 40 Under 40 honoree and recognized by the World Economic Forum as a Young Global Leader.Previously, Cal built and led the engineering teams at Flickr, through its acquisition by Yahoo. An experienced technology leader and a popular speaker on engineering scalability, he authored the best-selling O'Reilly Media book Building Scalable Websites. Cal was also a pioneer in the use of web APIs, and created the basis for OAuth and oEmbed, now used by YouTube, Twitter and many others.Cal was involved in London's early online network through his work with digital creative communities and the blogosphere. He has a BS in Computer Science and has received an Honorary Doctorate from Birmingham City University. He now resides in San Francisco."What every leader needs to do is recognize when the things that you are spending your time on aren't aligned with what's really important or what's the most value that you can get out of your time. I think it's very easy to fall into the trap of having a very full calendar, feeling very busy, feeling like there's so many things to do and the things that you do don't move the needle in any way.”- Cal Henderson ABOUT MARIA KAZANDJIEVAMaria (@stranger_quark) is a co-founder and an engineering leader at Graft, an early-stage AI startup. Prior to that, Maria worked at Netflix, where her team earned two Emmy awards for technical achievement. She holds a PhD in Computer Science from Stanford University. Outside of work, you can find Maria kickboxing & trail running, baking & eating carbs, or relaxing with a non-fiction book and her two feline supurrvisors, Foosball and Gemma.Looking for ways to support the show?Send a link to the show to your marketing team! https://sfelc.com/podcastsIf your company is looking to gain exposure to thousands of engineering leaders and key decision-makers, we have sponsorship opportunities available.To explore sponsor opportunities, email us at sponsor@sfelc.comInterested in joining an ELC Peer Group?ELCs Peer Groups provide a virtual, curated, and ongoing peer learning opportunity to help you navigate the unknown, uncover solutions and accelerate your learning with a small group of trusted peers.Apply to join a peer group HERE: sfelc.com/peerGroupsSHOW NOTES:Cal describes the early days & founding of Slack (2:24)The many hats an eng leader wears during a company's early stages (4:20)How Cal identified key inflection points as Slack evolved (6:31)Essential frameworks for successful reorgs (8:31)Tips for getting more comfortable with delegating (10:49)Why you should spend time & resources on developer productivity (13:31)Defining the leadership version of dev tools (16:52)Strategies for quickly aligning organizations through periods of change (20:04)How to align your calendar with what is most important as an eng leader (22:01)Cal and Maria's tips for personal retrospectives on where you invest your time (24:54)Audience Q&As: why Cal no longer codes for Slack (25:56)Questions to help you identify opportunities to be a force multiplier (27:20)How to measure the success of developer productivity (30:58)Tips for handling force multiplier “killers” (34:33)Why the most brilliant engineers are not only individually productive but also inspire productivity in others (36:50)
Cal Henderson, CTO of Slack, creator of Flickr, and author of ‘Building Scalable Websites' (O'Reilly Media, 2006) shares how Slack was built from both a tech and product perspective and what you should be doing to reclaim your focus time ⏱️. You don't want to miss out on hearing about the Slack tech stack from someone who is a pioneer in the use of web APIs and created the basis for OAuth and oEmbed. Listen to find out: >> How Slack does focus time >> What tech stack
Добрый день уважаемые слушатели. Представляем новый выпуск подкаста RWpod. В этом выпуске: Ruby Proposal to merge WASI based WebAssembly support That Old Certificate Expired and Started an Outage. This is What Happened Next Running Puma in AWS Migrating From Turbolinks To Turbo Simulate geolocation with Capybara and Headless Chrome Ruby-oembed - an oEmbed consumer library written in Ruby Web Discontinued Long Term Support for AngularJS Announcing Parcel CSS: A new CSS parser, compiler, and minifier written in Rust! How to Make a Component That Supports Multiple Frameworks in a Monorepo Ace, CodeMirror, and Monaco: A Comparison of the Code Editors You Use in the Browser How we migrated 541 components from Styled Components to Emotion with zero bugs Why practicing DRY in tests is bad for you Eleventy, a simpler static site generator React-Grid-Layout - a grid layout system Elf - a Reactive Store with Magical Powers Tinybase - a tiny, reactive JavaScript library for structured state and tabular data Danfojs - powerful javascript data analysis toolkit Ohm - a library and language for building parsers, interpreters, compilers, etc
- mp3gain - oEmbed - [雑] IT 系ニュースフィードを読むだけの配信 - [Qiita/Zenn] 特定の maven task を実行したときだけ ClassLoader で目的のクラスがスキャンできない
Twenty years ago, Cal Henderson was working in London while Stewart Butterfield was making a game called Game Neverending. Henderson, a big fan of the game, broke into the email server to join the internal mailing list of Butterfield's 4 person company. Eventually, Cal convinced Butterfield to hire him. The game was not going anywhere, so they started focusing on a side project which eventually became Flickr and eventually sold to Yahoo in 2005. The two founders went back to building another gaming company called Glitch. That didn't do well either. Another side project, that helped Glitch manage their remote teams now became the core product. They called it Slack. And the rest is history. Today Slack has a market cap of almost $15 billion. In the quarter ended April 2020, it pulled in over $200 million in revenues, growing at 49% compared to the year-ago quarter, with a gross margin of 87.3% and a stellar net retention rate of 132%.This episode of The Orbit Shift Podcast brings you a fireside chat between Cal Henderson and Girish Mathrubootham. The two talked about
Facebook is sharing 3 FREE lessons to help advertisers with the visual aspect of their ads. They also shared a FREE E-Book for marketers, by marketers. Facebook is prohibiting any ads against vaccinations. Facebook is ending the API for oEmbed and Embed blocks on Wordpress. And Notes are going away at the end of the month for personal profiles and business pages. Pinterest integration is now live in Microsoft Edge. LinkedIn is sharing resources on how they are helping nonprofits grow on their platform. LinkedIn is hosting Live With Marketers Oct 20th to discuss how to better engage your audience. This week’s Allyship Segment of the Week I’m sharing a link to the website Consciously Unbiased, a platform for change aimed at amplifying Black voices. Catch all the links to these topics on our website: www.chilldigitalmarketing.com/weekinreview.
Patrocinador: Ojo, porque Banco Sabadell tiene un podcast de entrevistas demasiado bueno presentado por Toni Garrido. Siempre con entrevistas increíbles, y muchos, por no decir la mayoría de los episodios, tratan sobre tecnología y sociedad. — Web, iVoox, Apple, Spotify. Pandemia aumenta ancho de banda y ventas de PCs / Taxis de Waymo para todos / Los gobiernos insisten en poner puertas traseras / Lo de Epic se puede enquistar Ponen balizas para saber dónde van las devoluciones de Amazon. Una investigación canadiense pudo ver cómo simples devoluciones recorrían cientos o miles de kilómetros, incluso para en ocasiones, ser completamente despezados y enviados al vertedero. He pasado una noche fatal sin dormir, pero esta tarde estaremos en Twitch comentando el evento de Apple en directo. Pasaos a ver mi cara de enfermo (y los nuevos iPhone) El ancho de banda global ha subido un 48% con el coronavirus. Todas estas videollamadas y streaming extra que hacemos han elevado casi un 50% el consumo de tráfico de Internet a nivel global, que se ha triplicado desde 2016. Suben las ventas de PC con la pandemia. Otro trimestre más, la inestabilidad hace que estudiantes, empleados y empresas necesiten más equipos para trabajo remoto. Subieron hasta 79 millones (+13%) según Canalys. Según IDC las ventas fueron mayores (81 millones), y dicen que podrían haberlo sido aún más pero había limitación de componentes. Los Chromebook, grandes ganadores, subiendo un 90%. Apple también de récord, además de “portátiles gaming” como categoría. La jueza de Epic vs. Apple avisa a Nintendo, Sony y Microsoft. Afirma que una posible decisión judicial podría también afectar a cómo operan las tiendas digitales de sus videoconsolas, y su relación con otros desarroladores. Ingeniero de Ubuntu explica cómo será el futuro de Linux+Windows. Afirma que Microsoft nunca moverá Windows a operar sobre el Kernel de Linux, pero que trabajan muy fuerte y a largo plazo para una intercompatibilidad, simbiosis y transparencia de uso que hasta hace poco era un sueño de loco. Coalición internacional vuelve a pedir puertas traseras. Los Cinco Ojos, India y Japón piden a las empresas tecnológicas que encuentren una forma de poder acceder al contenido cifrado de fin a fin en sus plataformas, para casos criminales graves y bajo autorización judicial. De nuevo, sigue sin tener sentido. MEGA colabora con los casos de abuso infantil. Revelan una política en la que el servicio en la nube entrega voluntariamente y sin orden judicial, los datos (cifrados) alojados en las cuentas de personas investigadas por crímenes contra menores. Los taxis autónomos de Waymo ya son públicos en Phoenix. Sale de beta, y podemos ver cómo la gente se monta (vídeo) en el coche totalmente vacío para realizar desplazamientos dentro de la capital de Arizona. Australia saca los cuernos al sol. Por primera vez en su historia, y durante unos minutos del mediodía del domingo 11 de octubre, la energía solar cubrió el 100% de la demanda eléctrica del estado de Australia Meridional. Una cuarta parte fue generado por los paneles solares en hogares, algo que Australia tiene muy bien implementado. Es solo una región, pero no es aún verano. El primero de muchos. Facebook desactiva el soporte público para oEmbed. A partir del 24 de octubre, cualquier blog, web o medio necesitará una cuenta de desarrollador de Facebook y su clave correspondiente para poder incrustar contenido de Instagram o Facebook entre su contenido. ¿Quieres colaborar con el programa? Colabora en Patreon Colabora en Ko-Fi (PayPal) ---- Ahora también tenemos un grupo de Telegram para oyentes: https://t.me/joinchat/AF0lVBd8RkeEM4DL-8qYfw ---- Sigue la publicación en: Newsletter diaria: http://newsletter.mixx.io Twitter: http://twitter.com/mixx_io o sigue a Álex directamente en: http://twitter.com/somospostpc Envíame un email: alex@barredo.es Telegram: https://t.me/mixx_io Web: https://mixx.io
Tips this week include: • Client interview series kicks off this Wednesday with Chas’ Greener • Google Web Stories plugin has officially released • A post with my first look at Web Stories • A tutorial on how to make a Web Story • Why I’m seeking speaking gigs for 2021 and why I need your help with it • A few more recommendations I’d like to get from you • The total site rebuild I’m doing on Astra and who’s going to help me with it • How we deal with overwhelm as our business grows • Why Facebook breaking the oEmbed connection may actually be ahead of the curve on what’s coming • An update on the Ultimate Addons for Gutenberg plugin troubleshooting • Why REST API passwords may be coming to the WordPress core and one thing I hope they finally drop • An update on the raging DDoS attacks that are still actively affecting the whole internet • Why you need to ensure you have a solid backup solution • A tip about storing your backup files on Amazon S3
This weeks WordPress news - Covering The Week Commencing 21st September 2020
✅stand fmでラジオ番組作りました。
Slack gives teams something new, a home that connects their conversations, information, and software to create the context and shared understanding people need to come together. Slack is a layer of the business technology stack that brings together people, data, and applications – a single place where people can effectively work together, find important information, and access hundreds of thousands of critical applications and services to do their best work. The universal challenge for every organisation is to turn groups of individuals moving in many directions into teams moving in the same direction. Slack gives teams something new, a home that connects their conversations, information, and software to create the context and shared understanding people need to come together. The company, which went public through a direct listing in June, is now in more than 150 countries, is used by 65 of the Fortune 100 companies and has more than 10 million daily active users. Cal chat's about how he went from game developer to the co-founder of a multi-billion dollar company, his advice for aspiring entrepreneurs, and the future of work. Cal Henderson oversees the engineering organization at Slack. He is an experienced technology leader, having previously built and led the engineering team at Flickr, through its acquisition by Yahoo. As a popular speaker on engineering scalability, he authored the best-selling O’Reilly Media book Building Scalable Websites. He was a pioneer in the use of web APIs, and created the basis for OAuth and oEmbed, now used by YouTube, Twitter, and many others. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_API Cal has a BCS from the University of Central England, and was involved in London’s early online community through his work with the early digital community B3ta and his personal blog iamcal.com, which he has run for over 15 years. Cal now resides in San Francisco.
Podcasts are a great thing – the good parts of a radio show, the powerful snippets from an audio book, with all the content control of a topical news feed. Yet, there was something missing when Leah Culver tried to find her next episode to listen to, while training for her 1st marathon.
http://keywebco.strikingly.com/blog/tips-on-embedding-in-blogs-and-websites-using-embedly I needed a way to add significantly more information in a single blog, I looked into different options. Embedly is a set of front-end tools that help web and app developers create better user experiences. the best tools are simple, easy to use, and perfectly suited to their task. You'll find that embodied in Embed, Extract, Display, and Video—tools that provide ultra-fast ways to present richer content more effectively. Though nothing is perfect meaning each different option like PDFs, Video, HTML, and so on, all have advantages and disadvantages. I use a combination of things in different websites yet the tool I use the most is embedly Embedly is well made and satisfying to use, I like the look of embedded cards which are created. Easy to do and everything worked flawlessly while I was testing out this plugin and since then. I can see quite a few uses for this plugin now and find more often. Before we get right to it let me give you a few tips to save you Possible issues later. 1. If you copy the code and use it and it fails or is “freaky” it could be you just need to include it in an iframe. 2. Very rarely a site will not work, sounds bad right? The reasons can vary yet it's a good thing. It cuts out sites that could be problematic. 3. Please note you can use this service to others blogs and websites however use of your own content is better by far. 4. Add media, measure engagement, and take action. Embedly provides tools for custom media integrations and audience insights. Embedly Integration Features Once you've added embeds and videos with Embedly, the real power of the platform becomes available. Use these features to increase engagement and drive traffic. Top sites depend on Embedly Including mine, Keywebco. Beautiful Media, Powerful Insights APIs - More powerful and flexible control of media YouTube Video Example Blog Example PDF Example Facebook Video Post Example Embedly makes it easy to display, control and measure third-party content in your application or website. Embed Embed enables developers to easily embed content from third-party content providers like YouTube, Vine, Flickr and many more. Embed follows the oEmbed spec. Learn more about the oEmbed API. Extract Think of Extract as a more powerful version of Embed. Extract content from any page, including full article text, multiple images, entities and much more. Learn more about the Extract API. Display The display offers an image proxy and resizing endpoints to handle all your image needs. It takes an image URL and allows you to crop, fill, or resize to fit your page or application's layout. The image proxy service allows: Manipulating images to fit the needs of your website, including cropping, resizing and filling images. Proxy images over HTTPS. Specifying a fallback image if an image fails. Integration with the Embedly API. Learn more about the Display API. Video Video is a quick and scalable way to have your own video service for uploading and playing videos on your site. Allow anyone - from your users to your team- to upload videos. Integrate video uploading anywhere, including apps, CMS's, or comments sections. Videos are processed to be optimized for desktop and mobile, and returned as a public URL and embed. Learn more about the Video API and read the tutorial. You can integrate recommendations on your site, or create a single recommendation as a test. Integration is far more successful to increase page views and recirculation among your content, and the single recommendation is great for prototyping. Recommendations show up only after a video is played. You can see a demo of it here. Cards Cards provide you with responsive and shareable embeds to drive the reach of your websites, blog posts, and articles. Our card generator makes it super simple to create a card of any site. Learn more about Cards. This adds platform.js to your --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/roger-keyserling/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/roger-keyserling/support
Mit WordPress Version 5.0 wird ein neuer Standardeditor für Beiträge eingeführt: Gutenberg. Das bisherige Konzept beim Erstellen von Inhalten gleicht bisher mehr dem Schreiben eines Aufsatzes in Word mit ein paar extra Funktionen wie oEmbed. In Zukunft möchte WordPress mehr in Richtung Page Builder gehen und Gutenberg ist definitiv mehr Page Builder als Texteditor. Das Zusammenstellen von Inhalten und diese zu strukturieren soll in Zukunft mehr in den Fokus geraten. In diesem Podcast präsentiere ich euch drei verschiedene Page Builder für WordPress, die alle ihre Vor- und Nachteile haben: Gutenberg WPBakery Page Builder Elementor
This week on WPblab we'll be discussing how to market your WordPress niche with Twitter Chats. It should be a fun episode learning how to interact with a twitter chat and how to run one yourself using your own hashtag.Twitter Chats – using hashtags: (#) + ‘keyword’ to filter/track related posts on a specific topicBack in the 90’s AOL had chatrooms with names where you could talk to people about a common topic. Anyone was welcome and it was public. Twitter chats are the modern day version of that.Hashtags help you to filter and search twitter – Twitter chats are “LIVE” versions of that search where people are commenting and participating in real-timeYou can register your chat on twubs.com but NO ONE can own a hashtag (since anyone can type and use them). It’s important for your hashtag to be unique. If you see a hashtag that was once used but is no longer, you can always ask the original parties who used it if it’s available, but better to select something no one is already using.Twitter chats can take 3-4 hours a week to manage.If you are starting one from scratch, ask some friends to join you when you launch!You’ll need 6-10 questions – extra brownie points if you post them in advance to blog/social media for people to see and plan ahead!Try to set a specific time for your chat every week & hold them regularly so people always know when to tune in – don’t forget that people need to be reminded, tooAlso, do a recap / summary post after the chat for people who missed out.You want to pick good questions that will produce good answers to help further the conversation! It’s like reverse engineering a blog post. Know what answers/discussions you are looking to have and work backwards to develop the questions that will get you there.Consider adding a category to your blog for the twitter chats to keep an archive of the recapsIf you get stuck looking for a topic, ask your audience and give them credit for the ideaBe committed – it can take up to a year to develop a solid chatA twitter chat is a lot like a talk show except everyone gets to answer at the same time – you need to keep things organized or a busy chat can easily get out of control. Use a format like Q1) … Q2)… and encourage your participants to use A1)…. A2) for their answers. Try to discourage hitting ‘reply’.Twitter Chat tools==================Twubs.comexample: http://twubs.com/NPChatTweetchat.comexample: http://tweetchat.com/room/npchatTchat.ioexample: http://www.tchat.io/rooms/npchatTweetReach.com – get stats on last 100 tweetsWhen you attend a twitter chat and interact, you know you’re chatting with real people, not bots – you will usually pick up followers and not just random followers, but quality onesMake a Twitter List based on your chats to help track people who are participating. Then you can engage with them during the week when the chat is not happening.The main purpose (from a strategic viewpoint) of attending or running a twitter chat is to establish yourself as a leader or expert in that nicheDon’t be afraid to ask higher profile twitter users or users with a lot of influence who are related to your topic to join you in hosting one of your chats!Oembed -allows you to embed tweets on your blog and/or websiteFavorite your own tweets – it’s “bookmarking”! Then when people answer your questions, heart all of them. As soon as chat ends, take another 30-60 mins to go back to your profile “likes” and work backwards to find the answers to the questions. Right-click and select “copy link” and then unfavorite and then go to the next. Pick the 3-5 best answers!Project on GitHub called ‘T’ sferik – twitter client for terminal: https://github.com/sferik/tIf you do host a chat, it’s highly recommended to add that information to your Twitter bio – when people click the hashtag, it will suggest people for them to followPromoting:use the right social network to promote – think of your audience.Best promotion is blog post. In your blog, try to include a feature/plugin that allows them to add the chat to their calendar.Post about it in relevant groups, but ONLY if you are a giver / active participant. A little bit of generosity goes a long way.Find out what your ‘niche’ is – what is that you do that makes you special! What is that you love, what kind of clients do you take on the most? Is there a theme or a pattern to how you spend your time or who you work with? Are there things that you are really good at?Look at your twitter analytics – what do your followers / friends have in common? Is your account the right account to run this specific chat on? Make sure if you are going to run a chat – make sure it’s line with you, your areas of expertise, and your audience.Repurpose content – look back at your old blog posts_________________________________________Thanks for helping with our show notes!Cheryl LaPrade @yaycherylSherie LaPrade @heysherieJames Tryon @jamestryonThe post WPBlab EP75 – Marketing Your WordPress Niche with Twitter Chats appeared first on WPwatercooler. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode I’ll show you how to embed videos from YouTube and Vimeo into your posts and pages. This works with some magic called oEmbed, a technology that only requires the URL to the video, from which WordPress can determine the correct width for your theme and pull in the complicated code we once … Continue reading WordPress 107: Embedding Videos →
Show Notes Episode 1 of Libsyn Live covered a range of topics. Quick notes and topic links are below. Question #1 Question #1 came from the audience asking how to generate a Google Plus Hangout on Air to host a podcast live on the internet. Krystal walked through the steps needed to schedule and start a hangout. There was also a comparison between a regular hangout (a private conversation between one or multiple participants, similar to a Skype call) and a hangout on air (a public viewing of the broadcast, allowing for participants, Q&A, chat, and so on). Question #2 Question #2 came from the audience, requesting details on how to switch away from using Feedburner for the RSS feed in order to start using the Libsyn generated RSS feed instead. Krystal walked through how to change who Feedburner pulls from first, then how to update the Libsyn feed so that Feedburner will redirect to Libsyn. This allows iTunes, other directories, and subscribers to automatically update so the move becomes seemless. Associated KB Article: http://support.libsyn.com/faqs/changing-your-feed-url-in-itunes/ Question #3 Question #3 came from the audience, wondering if Libsyn had a Wordpress plugin. Krystal walked through how to setup Wordpress OnPublish so that episodes posted in Libsyn would automatically post to Wordpress. Breaking News! Krystal was alerted during the show by the Libsyn development team that a plugin using OEMBED is in the works (of course, no ETA yet on when this will be available for beta testing). Question #4 Question #4 was a question Krystal wanted to cover which went over the three different images a producer typically deals with when configuring and pushing out episodes for a show. These include the show artwork, the artwork attached to a file ID3 tag, and the episode thumbnail. Associated KB Article: http://support.libsyn.com/faqs/working-with-show-imagery/ About Libsyn Live Krystal (Libsyn support) and Elsie (Libsyn's social media happiness expert) have come together to bring you a new live web series we are calling Libsyn Live. Episodes run on the first Thursday of every month at 6:00pm EST. Send questions via Google+, on Facebook, or on Twitter (@libsyn).
Show Notes Episode 1 of Libsyn Live covered a range of topics. Quick notes and topic links are below. Question #1 Question #1 came from the audience asking how to generate a Google Plus Hangout on Air to host a podcast live on the internet. Krystal walked through the steps needed to schedule and start a hangout. There was also a comparison between a regular hangout (a private conversation between one or multiple participants, similar to a Skype call) and a hangout on air (a public viewing of the broadcast, allowing for participants, Q&A, chat, and so on). Question #2 Question #2 came from the audience, requesting details on how to switch away from using Feedburner for the RSS feed in order to start using the Libsyn generated RSS feed instead. Krystal walked through how to change who Feedburner pulls from first, then how to update the Libsyn feed so that Feedburner will redirect to Libsyn. This allows iTunes, other directories, and subscribers to automatically update so the move becomes seemless. Associated KB Article: http://support.libsyn.com/faqs/changing-your-feed-url-in-itunes/ Question #3 Question #3 came from the audience, wondering if Libsyn had a Wordpress plugin. Krystal walked through how to setup Wordpress OnPublish so that episodes posted in Libsyn would automatically post to Wordpress. Breaking News! Krystal was alerted during the show by the Libsyn development team that a plugin using OEMBED is in the works (of course, no ETA yet on when this will be available for beta testing). Question #4 Question #4 was a question Krystal wanted to cover which went over the three different images a producer typically deals with when configuring and pushing out episodes for a show. These include the show artwork, the artwork attached to a file ID3 tag, and the episode thumbnail. Associated KB Article: http://support.libsyn.com/faqs/working-with-show-imagery/ About Libsyn Live Krystal (Libsyn support) and Elsie (Libsyn's social media happiness expert) have come together to bring you a new live web series we are calling Libsyn Live. Episodes run on the first Thursday of every month at 6:00pm EST. Send questions via Google+, on Facebook, or on Twitter (@libsyn).
Seit dem 11.12.2012 ist die neue WordPress Version 3.5 verfügbar, alles in allem hat sich nichts grundsätzliches geändert, bis auf den Media Manager, dieser hat ein umfangreiches und grundlegendes Redesign erfahren, weiterhin gibt es ein neues... Ähnliche Artikel: WordPress 3.1 MultiSite / Blognetzwerk Installation WordPress 3.4 (Green) Neuerungen: Custom-Header, Custom-Backgrounds, oEmbed und Live Theme Vorschau als Video-Training WordPress Multisite (MU) und Domain-Mapping
Ich habe euch bereits in einem kleinen Artikel die wichtigsten Neuerungen von WordPress 3.4 Green vorgestellt, sowie in einem weiteren die Funktionsweise der neuen Custom-Header Funktion. Um das ganze nun abzurunden, möchte ich euch... Ähnliche Artikel: Post Thumbnails in WordPress verwenden WordPress 3.1 MultiSite / Blognetzwerk Installation Custom-Post-Types in WordPress mit eigener Taxonomie – mit Video-Training