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Ashley Tan

YouTube Now Lets You License Videos Under Creative Commons (Remixers, Rejoice) - 0 views

  • Because starting now,
  • Because starting now, YouTube is giving users a choice over how they want to license their content. There’s still the standard YouTube license, which is fairly restrictive, and now there’s a new option: Creative Commons (with attribution). In short, you can now give other people permission to use your footage however they’d like, provided to include a link back to the source.
  • So, what does this mean for users? You’ll now be able to use YouTube’s video editor to splice your own video with content that has been uploaded by other users under Creative Commons, and they’ll be able to use your videos if you let them.
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  • To start things off, YouTube has worked with content partners like C-SPAN and Al Jazeera to offer an initial batch of 10,000 videos under the CC license.
Shamini Thilarajah

License your photos and more on Facebook - 1 views

  • Facebook has a great deal of content you are creating, uploading, posting, and sharing.  Why not license that as well so that your Flickr photos and your Facebook photos are both included. So that your blog posts and your status messages are both licensed.
Sally Loan

Blackboard: Now More "Open" | Hack Education - 0 views

  • The change will allow instructors to publish and share their courses — syllabi, handouts, and so on — under a Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY).
  • This will mean that, for the first time, content in Blackboard will be available to those who aren’t registered for a course — learners not enrolled, learners not on campus. Professors will be able to share their material to Facebook and Twitter.
  • Blackboard also says that it’s revising its policies so that institutions that do open up their course materials this way don’t incur any additional licensing costs when people access the materials, even via webinars and the like. That means non-traditional, non-enrolled, non-revenue generating students will be able to access the material as “guests” without forcing schools to pay more.
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  • “Sharing educational content is much more complicated that simply clicking the new ‘Share’ button,” he writes. How will universities handle the licensing of courses? Is it up to individual faculty? Will universities devise larger strategies to connect their open course content to other online efforts — both on their own campuses and alongside others?
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    Not sure this will happen to NIE? I wander..
yeuann

Wired.com Goes Creative Commons: 50 Great Images That Are Now Yours - 1 views

  • Wired.com photographers have the enviable job of shooting the coolest stuff and most intriguing people in the technology world. Now we’re giving away many of those photos to you, the public, for free. Beginning today, we’re releasing all Wired.com staff-produced photos under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC) license and making them available in high-res format on a newly launched public Flickr stream.
Niko chen

Free Music in the Free Music Archive - 0 views

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    Free music with various creative commons licenses.
casey ng

FlickrStorm. Search on Flickr with some Magic - 3 views

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    Attribution is the most difficult part when giving credit for the CC license material you use. This search engine that search only CC image will generate the crediting hyperlink for you at the same time.
yeuann

Explain Everything ™ for iPad on the iTunes App Store - 2 views

  • Explain Everything is an easy-to-use design, screencasting, and interactive whiteboard tool that lets you annotate, animate, narrate, import, and export almost anything to and from almost anywhere.
  • Explain Everything has been a top paid education app since its release in Australia, United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Finland.
  • Import PDF, PPT, DOC, XLS, Keynote, Pages, Numbers, and RTF files from Evernote, Dropbox, Box, GDrive, WebDAV, Email, iTunes, and any app that allows you to open these files types using "Open In…". Export MP4 movies, PDF documents, PNG images, or XPL project files directly from your iPad.
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    This seems to be the granddaddy of mVideo and mAPT. But for now, from what I can see, it still works on a post-processing scale - i.e. record, and THEN annotate, not allowing you to add comments or tags in real-time. (Yet.) But it seems like a very good source of revenue, offering educational licenses, etc.
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    If you or anyone like to try out the apps, ETs have bought this app. It's from Ashley's Christmas gift card.
bernard tan

Adobe is killing Creative Suite; here's why - 0 views

  • Not only is the creative services software shop closing down the Creative Suite version numbers and branding; it’s getting rid of the entire paradigm of old-school, cereal-box* software.
  • No more waiting for your design software’s features to catch up with what the web guys have been doing for six months
  • new purchasing paradigm for the entire creative industry. Every ad agency, every magazine, every indie design firm and print shop — they will all be transitioning from bought-and-owned software at $200 or $700 or $2,000 a pop to the Creative Cloud subscription model, which can cost as little as $20 per mont
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  • As for existing and even older versions of Creative Suite software, Morris said, “We’re not doing any [new] feature development
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    For MDs, Video Team and users of adobe products. We may face another licensing issues with their monthly subscriptions plan, so be prepared to hop onto the cloud, which means new workflow for us as well. Adobe announced that they will not release any more box sets and will not be supporting new features for existing versions. Seems like everyone on board Adobe platforms will be forced to get Adobe CC subscriptions next round. Be prepared to hope on the Cloud. you can get a trial version on their website to play around.. http://www.adobe.com/sea/products/creativecloud.html
Ashley Tan

Getty Museum makes 4,600 high-res images free to download with Open Content Program - 3 views

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    For MDs to take note.
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    Thanks! That's definitely a super big piece of good news for my team :)
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    Add an item to your cart and see how much it cost. A lot of steps.... Television educational, documentary or doc style program Editorial use primarily intended to educate, inform or disseminate information on educational programs, children focused news, historical programs, science or natural science programs, celebrities, sports or public figures. Includes programs such as list programs, public broadcasting docs, biographies or profiles. This license is for one time use only.
royal asg

Some advantages of LLC in Offshore - 0 views

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    Many company owners want to cut down the cost of reduction and running of the business. Its not easy since they have to keep up with tax filing, high cost of filing the returns and running the business.
Ashley Tan

Open educational practices - 0 views

  • I spoke about Open Educational Practices, (including Open Educational Resources and Open Scholarship) a subject which I am learning more about all the time as the movement grows and gains traction. You see, the idea behind open practices is that anyone can gain access for free, at any time and in any place - courses, software, ideas, knowledge, people... OEP requires everything to be open - for access, scrutiny and repurposing. So whether it's licensing agreements such as Copyleft or Creative Commons, or open access journals, or even massively online open courses, the open educational practices are gaining ground and influence in the academic world.
  • It's not going to be easy to change a model where knowledge has become a commodity though. Too many powerful people and organisations stand to lose a lot if everything becomes 'free' and open. But things are changing slowly. The publishing houses who once had a strangle hold on academic journals are beginning to lose their grip. Some are having to change their business models. Google Reader and Google Books for example, are giving us all more than a glimpse of the pages of just about every book that has ever been published. And open access journals are opening up knowledge for all without payment. So when a student comes up against a paywall - what will they do? They will go elsewhere of course - to the free versions that are out there on the web.
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