Archive for the ‘browsers’ Category

Download YouTube videos to your desktop

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Here’s an easy way to download a YouTube video to your local hard drive. Use KeepVid! It’s a website AND a bookmarklet.
Url-Tube
From YouTube, copy the link of the video you want to keep. It will look something like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzi0maowYws
It is located just above the EMBED link to the right of the video. If you don’t see it, click the MORE INFO link to reveal it.
More-Info

Now that you have the link in your clipboard, browse to KeepVid, where you can paste the link and download your video.

Of course, there is an easier way, thanks to the KeepVid bookmarklet. Put the bookmarklet in your toolbar, then when you are on a YouTube page and you want to save the video you’re watching, click the “Keep It!” link. You’ll get a list of videos from the page and links marked ‘Download.’

Bookmarklet

The Wayback Machine of the Digital Age

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

Wayback Clip
Mr. Peabody’s Wayback Machine has been upgraded and now includes the internet. Do you remember the cartoon, Peabody and Sherman from the 1960s? In it, a dog named Mr. Peabody and his pet boy, Sherman, traveled throughout history helping major historical events turn out as history books tell us they did. They used one of Mr. Peabody’s inventions, The Wayback Machine.
Wayback-MachineFast-forward to 1996, when The Internet Archive was founded to build an Internet library. Librarians are behind the idea of preserving society’s cultural artifacts and providing access to them. Civilization needs memory archives to learn from its successes and failures. The Internet Archive focuses on collections of digital artifacts, including texts, audio, moving images, and software as well as archived web pages.
GooglebetaMy friend and Virtual Assistant, Shane B. told me about The Wayback Machine, as the Internet Archive is called. As you might guess, many web developers and administrative assistants use the archive to look up an old web page. Perhaps your website has undergone 2-3 redesigns in its internet life. Travel back with the Wayback Machine and view its different looks. Or perhaps you want some important data that was removed from one of your web pages. You could find it here.

Just for fun, go to the Wayback Machine and type in “google.com” . Then, click on the very first entry, dated Nov 11, 1998. Wow! Google in Beta!

Copyright Infringement and Website Content

Friday, July 4th, 2008

Get-ImageYou are surfing the web one evening, catching up on your blog reading perhaps, when you come across a beautiful image. And you think to yourself, “This image would be perfect to demonstrate my new marketing plan on my company website.” Then you do a simple control-click on the image to save it to your hard drive. So far, no harm done.
But once you take that image and insert it onto a page of your company’s website; if you haven’t gotten permission from the creator of the image; you have broken the law.

This happens more than you may realize, primarily because it is so easy to do. Technology allows us to “grab” imagery and other content from web pages. There is no harm in taking an image from someone’s web page and playing with it in a program like Photoshop – on your own computer.

EmailCopyright protects creative work such as writing, music, photographs, and paintings. If you want to use that beautiful image to visually denote your new marketing plan, obtain permission from the image creator. Even if you attribute the image to its creator, if you publish work on your site without the creator’s permission, you may be held liable for copyright infringement.

Using an email program, technology also allows us to communicate easily and quickly with another person, whether they live on the next street over, or the next continent over. So, protect yourself and ask permission.

Colorzilla Update Now Available for Firefox v3

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

ColorzillaColorzilla is a great little add-on to Firefox that provides color information for the web page you are viewing. It includes an eyedropper and color picker, and now with version 2, the Webpage DOM Color Analyzer and Online Palette Viewer.
Both of these are useful additions to an already handy web developer tool. Quickly find out the hex color code for a particular item on a page. With the Color Analyzer you can find out what CSS rules specify a given color. The Online Palette Viewer allows you to create a color palette based on the colors of the web page.
Color-Analysis Here you see the Color Analysis for my blog, Megabytes. When you hover over any color square in the palette at the bottom of the screen, the tool tip provides both RBG and HEX color info. Further, the item(s) on the page which use this color, are highlighted. Click on a color square to see the CSS rules that specify that color.

I recommend installing Alex Sirota’s Colorzilla into Firefox. Oh, and using Firefox - well, that’s a given!

Create A Favicon Easy As Pie

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Favicons are those tiny little (16×16) graphics in the address bar of browsers, just to the left of the URL itself. Used to be you would crank open Photoshop and create your own piece of tiny web art there.
Favikon
Now, you can simply go to favikon to create your favicon in seconds. Yes. It IS that fast. And easy, too.
Try it. Upload a graphic file under 5MB, position the capture region, create!