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Claude Almansi

Word Counter - 1 views

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    "Wordcounter is a word count and a character count tool. Simply place your cursor into the box and begin typing. Word counter will automatically count the number of words and characters as you type. You can also copy and paste a document you have already written into the word counter box and it will display the word count and character numbers for that piece of writing. Knowing the number of words or characters in a document can be important. For example, if the author is required to write a minimum or maximum amount of words for an article or paper, word counter can help them know if their article meets these requirements. In addition, word counter automatically shows you the top 10 keywords and keyword density of the article you're writing. This allows you to know what keywords you use most often and what percentage each is used within the article. This can help you from over-using certain words in your writing and allow you to make sure you have the correct keyword distribution you're trying to obtain for any article you write. Word counts can also be important in defining typing and reading speeds. Word counter can help determine both of these. Simply set a timer and start typing and when the time is up, you'll instantly know how many words you have typed for that period of time. If you have any questions about word counter, please feel free to contact us here. Disclaimer: We strive to make our word counter as accurate as possible but we cannot guarantee it will always be so."
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    Contatore di parole online: si scrive o si incolla un testo, e lui ti dà automaticamente il numero, oltre a quello delle parole, dei segni (non so se con o senza spazi però), delle frasi, dei paragrafi, e la lunghezza media delle frasi (in No di parole), nonché la frequenza delle parole chiave più usate. Cioè potrebbe anche essere utile per scegliere tag quando si fa un segnalibro su Diigo ;)
Claude Almansi

Microsoft reveals zero-day attacks against Word | Larry Seltzer ZDNet 2014-03-24 - 0 views

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    "By Larry Seltzer for Zero Day | March 24, 2014 -- 19:16 GMT (12:16 PDT) Microsoft announced today that an unpatched vulnerability in Microsoft Word is being exploited in the wild. All versions of Microsoft Word, both Mac and Windows, and several related programs like the Word Viewer and Word Automation Services on Microsoft SharePoint Server are also vulnerable, but the current attacks are directed at Microsoft Word 2010. Exploits such as these are often version-specific, and in targeted attacks, such as this appears to be, the attacker may already know which version he needs to exploit. Microsoft also says that Microsoft Outlook could also be exploited with such an RTF file if Word were set as the viewer for Outlook. In the default configuration Word is the viewer in Outlook 2007, 2010 and 2013."
fabrizio bartoli

Infographic Names 21 Emotions with No English Word Equivalents | Mental Floss - 2 views

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    While we may have many words we can use to represent our emotions, there are some feelings that no English word can describe. But that doesn't mean other languages don't have words for them-and as part of an ongoing project called Unspeakableness, design student Pei-Ying Lin created an infographic that ties feelings we have no names for to their foreign language word equivalents. Read the full text here: http://mentalfloss.com/article/32234/infographic-names-21-emotions-no-english-word-equivalents#ixzz2WYOeLXBU  --brought to you by mental_floss! 
Claude Almansi

02 - MOOC acronym [Massive Teaching] with subtitles | Amara - 0 views

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    "MOOC.Well, what's that? The word MOOC is an acronym. I should at least say once what it stands for: Massive Online Open Course. That was the easy part, just to give you those words. Now to give a definition, that's going to be very challenging.For every one of those words, I think it's fair to say that there is a generally accepted understanding of what the word means, but then there is a substantial number of people who challenge that understanding, who try to push it further....
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    "From Week 1 Lecture Videos of "Teaching goes massive: new skills required" by Paul-Olivier Dehaye See https://etherpad.mozilla.org/pr8ZtLXODg and http://www.elearnspace.org/blog/2014/07/09/congrats-to-paul-olivier-dehaye-massiveteaching/"
Claude Almansi

Odds And Not Ends: Automated translation: Babelfish 101 - DDN C. Almansi 2005-03-04 - 0 views

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    "Babelfish 101 (also appliable to the Google translator) Babelfish is not a little polyglot genius lurking in your computer or in cyberspace Babelfish is A computer program made of lists of words and phrases in different languages complex, but not all-covering, rules applied to these lists in order to produce translations Babelfish will not give you a publishable or even editable version of your text in another language analyse and render correctly complex sentence structures always choose the meaning you had it mind if two or more words have the same spelling confuse two words due to approximate memory Babelfish will produce apparent gibberish give you a rough idea of what someone else's original text is about Therefore, when dealing with Babelfish, you must use commonsense Don't use Babelfish to produce a translation into another language, especially if you don't know that language If you know others will use Babelfish to read you, use simple sentence structure and avoid terms that can have several meanings If you read something absurd or outrageous in a Babelfish translation, don't immediately attribute the absurdity or outrage to the author. Try to guess from the context what the author might have meant Compare what the author might have meant with what you know of Babelfish's limitations, to see if these limitations are the likely cause of the apparent absurdity or outrage be wary of commonsense The author may indeed have expressed something that would baffle you even if you both used the same language: because your cultural references are different, because s/he is using irony because (make your own list) ask when in doubt ;-)" Avevo scritto questo post su un blog del Digital Divide Network (DDN) che non c'è più. Questa è la copia salvata sull'Internet Archive il 13 agosto 2007
Claude Almansi

Una domanda, un compito e un'esplorazione 2013/04/05 commento 102 - 0 views

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    "Andreas Inviato aprile 6, 2013 alle 9:37 am | Permalink @Monica Viali #93 No Monica, c'è una prevalenza di insegnanti ma molte persone interessate ai temi della formazione a vario titolo. Ci sono anche persone che fanno lavori diversi, per esempio persone che lavorano nell'amministrazione di qualche organizzazione, manager ecc. Se ti è utile? È libero, provalo, quando ti stanchi smetti. Ma amici: dove viene questa ossessione contemporanea di sapere *prima* se una nuova iniziativa mi sarà *utile*? Non è che stiamo un po' perdendo il gusto della vita? PiratePad o Word? Dipende, come sempre… Qui provali… Vuoi proprio una risposta perché l'ansia monta? Usa (per ora) word per il diario e gioca un po' con PiratePad, gioca… E poi l'inizio del diario si può anche scrivere a mano, se non vi fa fatica trascrivere dopo nel blog. @Marina #100 Se aprite un documento in PiratePad, prendete nota (copia-incollate) il suo indirizzo URL, è con questo che poi lo ritroverete *là fuori* Potete anche crearlo "imponendo" un URL che vi piace, tipo http://pirate.pad/ e poi aggiungendo quello che volete, pippo, ilmiopad, ilpadpiuganzodelmondo ecc."
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    Come ritrovare un pad fatto su PiratePad. Vedi anche il commento #191 tutto su PiratePad http://iamarf.org/2013/04/05/una-domanda-un-compito-e-unesplorazione-ltis13/#comment-13465: "Non va assolutamente bene per tenerci documenti, non c'è nessuna garanzia di persistenza, anche se fino ad ora non ho mai perso niente, quando mi è capitato di usarlo. Ma sarebbe sciocco pretenderlo. Quando si usa va sempre esportato il contenuto - ma questo è vero anche con tutto il cloud."
Claude Almansi

NOTES 693B (EFS Stanford, Adv. listening and voc. dev. - curated TED talks) - 4 views

  • no transcript available
    • Claude Almansi
       
      [about http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/a_ted_speaker_s_worst_nightmare.html ] Actually, this TED page has an English subtitle-generated transcript (as well as translated transcripts in the 47 other languages the video is subtitled in). And the transcript in http://amara.org/en/videos/h60BL6bU49WF/en/2426/ page where the English subtitles were made shows an average 90 wpm in the passages where Collins actually speaks. This remains rather slow indeed, however non natives may find it difficult to grasp the written texts that appear very briefly on-screen, and hence Collins' allusions to these texts. (CA)
  • no transcript available
    • Claude Almansi
       
      [About http://www.ted.com/talks/gel_gotta_share.html] Actually there IS a transcript generated by the subtitles captions: - below the player in http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=soAk3F0wX9s - downloadable from http://www.amara.org/en/videos/gUDo8ztfKMOW/en/40866/ (Download > TXT) 362 words in 3:20 = 108.6 WPM
  • no captions for the first 34 seconds
    • Claude Almansi
       
      [About http://www.ted.com/talks/gel_gotta_share.html] Actually captions now start at 0:03
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • no transcript
    • Claude Almansi
       
      Actually, there is a transcript for this video - on the YT original page from which it's embedded in the TED.com page. See my 2nd note to https://groups.diigo.com/group/ltis13/content/improv-everywhere-gotta-share-video-on-ted-com-11313381
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    "EFS 693B - STANFORD UNIVERSITY Advanced Listening and Vocabulary Development (...) TED Talks Introduction Below are groups of TED Talks, curated from http://www.ted.com and organized roughly by level and topic. You should do a full group (divided across several sessions if desired) and see if the integration makes them easier to understand (especially the later ones). Be sure to interact with them--don't just watch all of them straight through. However, you can do all or parts of some more intensively than others. Use your best judgment, and return to previous class notes as needed. Note that you are provided with the following information about the talk: 1. length 2. the overall speed in words-per-minute (WPM) 3. the vocabulary profile by percent of words at set frequency levels of the British National Corpus (3K, 5K, 10K, and more than 20K (off-list=OL)) 4. Accent (US, British, etc.) 5. Comments 6. Brief description of the content (from the TED website) (...) Last modified November 12, 2013, by Phil Hubbard"
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    Da questo webquest di Phil Hubbard sono tratti i segnalibri taggati EFS_Stanford, cioè radunati (assieme a questo) sotto https://groups.diigo.com/group/ltis13/content/tag/EFS_Stanford .
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    Molto interessante e sopratutto utile grazie!
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    Grazie, Fabrizio, Ho taggato con "EFS_Stanford" - tra altri tag - questo webquest e i video ivi elencati dopo un webinar con Phil Hubbard organizzato via hangout da Vance Stevens domenica scorsa (8 ottobre). Nel webinar Hubbard ha insistito sul fatto che la forma di webquest direttivo era meglio delle forme di collaborazione sociali come tagging e condivisione, perché gli consentiva, da esperto, di dare informazioni coerenti. Allora taggare queste sue risorse TED su Diigo è anche un modo di esprimere il mio dissenso ;-) In effetti a proposito di http://www.ted.com/talks/gel_gotta_share.html , elencato in questo webquest, dice di non poter indicare le parole per minuto "perché non c'è trascrizione". Invece c'è, se si va alla pagina YT originale del video embeddato. Ora se invece di un webquest statico avesse condiviso questa risorsa con i suoi studenti in un gruppo come questo, c'è da scommettere che almeno uno di loro avrebbe rimediato all'errore in un commento - come d'altronde ho fatto in https://groups.diigo.com/group/ltis13/content/tag/EFS_Stanford%20GelConference ...
Claude Almansi

List of Regular Expressions - LibreOffice Help - 1 views

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    "\n Represents a line break that was inserted with the Shift+Enter key combination. To change a line break into a paragraph break, enter \n in the Search for and Replace with boxes, and then perform a search and replace. \n in the Search for text box stands for a line break that was inserted with the Shift+Enter key combination. \n in the Replace with text box stands for a paragraph break that can be entered with the Enter or Return key. \t Represents a tab. You can also use this expression in the Replace with box. \b Match a word boundary. For example, "\bbook" finds "bookmark" but not "checkbook" whereas "book\b" finds "checkbook" but not "bookmark". The discrete word "book" is found by both search terms. ^$ Finds an empty paragraph."
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    (per cercare e sostituire/sopprimere ad es. un segno di paragrafo)
Claude Almansi

Christopher deCharms: A look inside the brain in real time | Video on TED.com - 1 views

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    Filmed Feb 2008 * Posted Mar 2008 * TED2008 "Neuroscientist and inventor Christopher deCharms demonstrates a new way to use fMRI to show brain activity -- thoughts, emotions, pain -- while it is happening. In other words, you can actually see how you feel. Christopher deCharms is working on a way to use fMRI scans to show brain activity -- in real time."
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    From http://www.stanford.edu/~efs/693b/TED1.html : "1. length: 4:00 2. overall speed (WPM): 182 3. vocabulary profile: 3K-94.3%; 5K-96.4%; 10K-97.9%; OL-3.2% 4. accent: US standard 5. comments: there is a reference at the beginning of shrinking a ship and injecting it into the bloodstream, see: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0060397/; http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093260/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1. fMRI = functional magnetic resonance imaging--a way to view the brain in action. 6. Neuroscientist and inventor Christopher deCharms demonstrates a new way to use fMRI to show brain activity -- thoughts, emotions, pain -- while it is happening. In other words, you can actually see how you feel.
Claude Almansi

Ok, qualcosa su Piratepad - #ltis13 IAMARF Andreas Formiconi 2013-04-09 - 0 views

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    "...Piratepad non va certo confuso con strumenti di word processing. Sono due cose diverse. Si tratta di uno strumento usato primariamente da comunità di hacker e gruppi di attivisti (Pirati appunto) perché l'hanno trovato congegnale allo sviluppo dei loro progetti, in forme collaborative leggere, dinamiche, online, e se lo sono forgiato così perchè fa comodo loro cosi. E fa comodo in tutti i casi analoghi, come per esempio quello del gruppo #linf12, l'ultimo laboratorio informatico frequentato dalle vostre colleghe di cui molte sono anche qui, in #ltis13..."
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    Sottotitolazione dei video tutorial al 24 maggio 2013: http://www.amara.org/en/videos/GJfRZoStXlAq/info/piratepad-concetti-generali/ sottotitoli completi http://www.amara.org/en/videos/RsQ2TtzU6F9a/info/piratepad-comandi/ sottotitoli completi
Claude Almansi

DDN Articles - What's RSS and Why Should I Care About It? [copia Internet Archive del 8... - 0 views

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    "Author: Andy Carvin , EDC Center for Media & Community | December 7th, 2004 You may have noticed recently that lots of websites now contain little graphical buttons with the word XML on them. For example: XML button When you click on the button, all you see is a bunch of jumbled text and computer code. What's this all about? It's an RSS feed, and they're changing the way people access the Internet. RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is a technical format that allows online publishers to share and distribute their content to other websites or individual Internet users. It's commonly used for distributing headlines on news websites. Bloggers use it to distribute summaries of their blog entries as well. RSS is written in the Internet coding language known as XML, which is why you see RSS buttons labeled that way. If a website publishes an RSS page, commonly known as an RSS "feed," this feed will contain summaries of all the recent articles posted on that site. For example, Yahoo News publishes news related to world headlines, national news, sports, etc. These you can all read by going to the Yahoo website. But they also publish RSS feeds for each of these subjects. Each RSS feed contains a summary of the most recent news stories posted. Similarly, the Digital Divide Network publishes RSS feeds for our news headlines, events listings and other content on our website. I even have my own RSS feed for articles that I publish on my personal blog, Andy Carvin's Waste of Bandwidth. But why do RSS feeds look like a jumbled mess when I click on them with most Web browsers? It's because RSS feeds are meant to be read by machines rather than people. Software and websites can understand the data contained in RSS feeds and make it available to people on personalized websites, through software known as news aggregators, even through email. So when you aggregate RSS feeds, you're having a computer collect content from many different websites and organize them in a convenient pla
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    Linkato in http://iamarf.org/2013/04/20/racconti-ltis13/ , commento 42. RSS come empowerment.
fabrizio bartoli

Storytelling with Maps - Template Gallery - 5 views

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    "Story map templates Templates provide an easy way to publish your own story map (without having to write code). Each template uses a distinct story-telling technique. You supply the web map and the words. File downloads include the web files you will need, plus a readme file explaining configuration"
fabrizio bartoli

Home › PrimaryPad - 1 views

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    "Welcome to PrimaryPad PrimaryPad is a web-based word processor designed for schools that allows pupils and teachers to work together in real-time. Look below to see how it works and create a new pad to the right to have a go, you also get a free 3 month trial when you sign up! Free pads last 30 days from the time of creation."
fabrizio bartoli

Team WhiteBoarding with Twiddla - Painless Team Collaboration for the Web - 1 views

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    "Twiddla does EtherPad Remember EtherPad? They were the the coolest thing around a few years back, with their little collaborative text editor that synchronized everything as you typed. As a product, it was simple and to the point. And it just plain worked in a way that all the other "Online Word Processors" of the day didn't. Then Google bought them and it went away."
Claude Almansi

Improv Everywhere: Gotta share! | Video on TED.com - 2 views

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    Filmed Apr 2011 * Posted May 2011 * Gel Conference "At the onstage introduction of Twirlr, a new social-sharing platform, someone forgets to silence their cell phone. And then ... this happens. (Song by Scott Brown and Anthony King; edit by Nathan Russell.) Improv Everywhere is a New York City-based prank collective that causes scenes of chaos and joy in public places." YouTube URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=soAk3F0wX9s
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    From http://www.stanford.edu/~efs/693b/TED1.html : "1. length: 3:20 2. overall speed (WPM): unknown--no transcript (*)--but not too fast 3. vocabulary profile: mostly frequent words--no transcript available 4. accent: US standard 5. comments: no captions for the first 34 seconds (**). References to various social sharing applications (Twitter, Facebook, Vimeo, Myspace, FourSquare...) 6. At the onstage introduction of Twirlr, a new social-sharing platform, someone forgets to silence their cell phone. And then ... this happens" (*) Actually there IS a transcript generated by the subtitles captions: - below the player in http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=soAk3F0wX9s - downloadable from http://www.amara.org/en/videos/gUDo8ztfKMOW/en/40866/ (Download > TXT) 362 words in 3:20 = 108.6 WPM (CA) (**) Actually captions now start at 0:03 (CA)
fabrizio bartoli

Wink - [Homepage] - 1 views

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    "Wink is a Tutorial and Presentation creation software, primarily aimed at creating tutorials on how to use software (like a tutor for MS-Word/Excel etc). Using Wink you can capture screenshots, add explanations boxes, buttons, titles etc and generate a highly effective tutorial for your users. Here is a sample Flash tutorial created by Wink."
Claude Almansi

ELAN description | The Language Archive - 2 views

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    "ELAN is a professional tool for the creation of complex annotations on video and audio resources. With ELAN a user can add an unlimited number of annotations to audio and/or video streams. An annotation can be a sentence, word or gloss, a comment, translation or a description of any feature observed in the media. Annotations can be created on multiple layers, called tiers. Tiers can be hierarchically interconnected. An annotation can either be time-aligned to the media or it can refer to other existing annotations. The textual content of annotations is always in Unicode and the transcription is stored in an XML format. ELAN provides several different views on the annotations, each view is connected and synchronized to the media playhead. Up to 4 video files can be associated with an annotation document. Each video can be integrated in the main document window or displayed in its own resizable window. ELAN delegates media playback to an existing media framework, like Windows Media Player, QuickTime or JMF (Java Media Framework). As a result a wide variety of audio and video formats is supported and high performance media playback can be achieved. ELAN is written in the Java programming language and the sources are available for non-commercial use. It runs on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. Main other features navigate through the media with different step sizes easy navigation through existing annotations waveform visualization of .wav files support for template documents input methods for a variety of script systems multi-tier regular expression search, within a single document or in a selection of annotation documents support for user definable Controlled Vocabularies import and export of Shoebox/Toolbox, CHAT, Transcriber (import only), Praat and csv/tab-delimited text files export to interlinear text, html, smil and subtitles text printing of the annotations multiple undo/redo Download ELAN"
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    Il software serve ad annotare video e audio: sembra piuttosto complesso ma è prodotto e offerto dal progetto The Language Archive dell'Istituto Max Plank dei Paesi Bassi, perciò sembra abbastanza sicuro. Ho installato la versione per Mac: poi provo e riporto
Claude Almansi

A Fair(y) Use Tale | Center for Internet and Society - 0 views

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    "By Documentary Film Program on March 1, 2007 at 1:30 pm Professor Eric Faden of Bucknell University created this humorous, yet informative, review of copyright principles delivered through the words of the very folks we can thank for nearly endless copyright terms. View (streaming) or download (mp4) the whole film or watch it below Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License Distributed on DVD by The Media Education Foundation."
Claude Almansi

NPR's Andy Carvin on Tracking and Tweeting Revolutions | PBS NewsHour - Hari Sreenivasa... - 1 views

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    "TWITTER -- February 17, 2011 at 9:30 AM EDT NPR's Andy Carvin on Tracking and Tweeting Revolutions By: Hari Sreenivasan We caught up with NPR's Senior Strategist Andy Carvin between his 400+ tweets a day for a chat about his Twitter stream. It has become a must-follow wire service of sorts for people interested in the latest developments in Tunisia, Egypt and a growing number of countries across the Middle East, Persian Gulf and North Africa. We discussed how he began mapping out whom to trust in the "Twittersphere," and how he works to verify and share facts with NPR as the stories develop. His tweets are populated with the words "source" and "verified?" More often than not, as he re-tweets trends and waves of information across the streams he tracks as his sources verify or discount facts on the ground. Carvin uses a combination of old media (wire services, broadcast networks) and follows a series of bloggers and Twitter accounts. He verifies with sources he trusts before saying a piece of information is "confirmed." Andy has spoken about his open news-gathering processes during a live-chat with Poynter, a Q&A with the Atlantic, the Knight Digital Media Center and it has been blogged about at the New York Times."
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    URL dei link del testo Conto twitter di Andy Carvin: http://twitter.com/acarvin Poynter: http://bit.ly/fND2aM Atlantic: http://bit.ly/h4O3Gr Knight Digital Media Center: http://bit.ly/fAjoBi New York Times: http://nyti.ms/edNSIi Conto twitter di Hari Sreenivasan: http://twitter.com/hari
Claude Almansi

YouTubers, You Need to Closed Caption Your Videos! | closed captioned - YouTube 2014-10-12 - 0 views

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    "Rikki Poynter Published on Oct 12, 2014 Getting started on CC videos - https://captiontube.appspot.com/ https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2734799?hl=en Option #2 https://www.zencaptions.com/ ($1 per minute. First 10 minutes free.) Or type up everything you said in a word document and upload it. It's that simple. THE ARTICLE » http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/06/rikki-poynter-deaf-hoh-beauty-vlogger_n_5941160.html?1412631517 FACEBOOK POST » https://www.facebook.com/HuffPostGoodNews/posts/699752686777585 YOUTUBE MENTIONS » FRANCHESCA » https://www.youtube.com/user/chescaleigh CONNOR » https://www.youtube.com/user/AConMann"
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    do you know you can integrate AI with Captions and it will be very easy for every youtuber to generate captions easily. i found some cool way to generate captions in multiple language using tool called Trance check out this unique tool here https://digital-nirvana.com/products/trance/
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