Rob Cottingham

Meeting your social media humor needs since 1963

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14 May 2012

Why we love ScreenFlow: screen capture for the Mac

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If you spend any time teaching people about online tools, or documenting them, or pitching them, chances are you’ve thought about screen capture software. And last week, a post on the Web of Change email list asked for recommendations on just that topic.

I weighed in on the side of Telestream’s ScreenFlow, and I’m sharing it here in case you’re looking for something for your next computer or Internet tutorial:

I have a two-year torrid love affair with ScreenFlow (although Darren Barefoot has actually proposed to marry it, so consider me trumped). It’s Mac-only, but if you’re in the Apple universe, you get an awful lot for the $99 pricetag.

Here’s some of what I like:

  • A simple, intuitive editing interface that – for me, at least – beats the more recent versions of iMovie for making sense right off the bat
  • Fast and easy creation of callouts (that is, highlights, with background blurring and darkening, and foreground zooming)
  • Fast and easy annotation with text and shapes
  • Easy addition of new recordings
  • Simple adjustment of playback speed

And here’s some of what I’d like to see:

  • Clip masking or cropping
  • Integrating edited clips into one, so you can then apply affects to the whole
  • Customizable presets for text, annotations and callouts
  • More customization in the export settings, especially publishing
  • Better HTML5 support in publishing

Check out some of the other feature requests from the user community.

A note: because its export function relies on QuickTime, you’re limited to Apple’s selection of video formats (of which H.264 is probably the most universal). So if you have your heart set on WebM or Ogg, you’re out of luck.

How about you? Got a favourite screen capture tool? Do you use QuickTime’s free screen recording feature on the Mac? CamStudio on Windows? Camtasia? Jing? Make your case in the comments!*

* Vendors, you know we love you, but please leave this conversation for users and customers. Thanks!

11 May 2012

A bookmarklet to hide the Drupal 7 administration toolbar

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The (barely-tested) bookmarklet: Drag this link to your browser’s bookmarks bar: Hide toolbar | Restore toolbar

I love the administration toolbar that comes with Drupal 7, the one that puts the admin menu within easy reach at all times. It’s one of the most convenient developments in my online life.

But there are times when it’s really inconvenient – like when you I want to show an unpublished page the way an ordinary mortal will see it when they visit. There’s a shortcut bar underneath it, which you can hide or show at will… but that toolbar stays there, come hell or high water, as long as you’re logged in.

Short of installing a module (which would be rude of me, if I’m not the guy actually developing the site), I’ve resorted to hiding the toolbar by manually editing the CSS properties in my browser. A little “display:none” here, a sprinkle of “padding-top:0px” there, and we’re in business.

But that gets old pretty quickly. How about handling it in one click? The JavaScript is actually pretty straightforward (this is on a site where the body‘s CSS “padding-top” value is zero throughout):

javascript:document.getElementById(“toolbar”).setAttribute(“style”, “display:none”);void(document.body.style.paddingTop=”0px”);

It works by hiding the contents of the toolbar, and resetting the body‘s padding-top value to zero.

I tested it successfully in Safari, Firefox and Chrome, but I ran it through John Gruber’s JavaScript bookmark builder to work its magic encoding on the spaces and punctuation just to be safe. It now looks like this:

javascript:document.getElementById(%22toolbar%22).setAttribute(%22style%22,%20%22display:none%22);void(document.body.style.paddingTop=%220px%22);

Of course, you might want the toolbar back again. So:

javascript:document.getElementById(“toolbar”).setAttribute(“style”, “display:block”);void(document.body.style.paddingTop=”65px”);

…and, encoded:

javascript:document.getElementById(%22toolbar%22).setAttribute(%22style%22,%20%22display:block%22);void(document.body.style.paddingTop=%2265px%22);

Limitations:

  • It only disables the toolbar until you reload the page or navigate to another one.
  • I haven’t tested it in anything except the Mac versions of Safari 5.1.5, Firefox 11 and Chrome 19.0.1084.46. Oh, and I’ve tested it on all of one Drupal site.
  • It assumes the body‘s padding-top CSS value is zero pixels.

Let me know if it works for you – or if you’ve found a more useful/robust solution.

Bookmarklets: Hide toolbar | Restore toolbar (or, if you get easily frustrated, Die, toolbar, die! | Restore toolbar)

6 May 2012

Before I Die: a public art project pops up nearby

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Category: Everything Else

Check out the full project at BeforeIDie.cc. Amazing.

(I’m a little chagrined that my first instinct was suspicion that this was a marketing campaign. Maybe that’s a healthy instinct in 2012 — or maybe I need to lose some of my cynicism.)

5 May 2012

A little respect for audiences, please

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Category: Everything Else
Let’s understand something – My audience is the most important thing to me in my world, next to my wife and cat. I’ve spent YEARS and YEARS cultivating my audience. I’ve spent countless nights figuring out what my audience wants, how they want it, and what they’re going to want next. I’d take a bullet for my audience.

Peter Shankman got a PR pitch asking to “borrow” his audience, and he explained in vehement, articulate detail why the sender couldn’t.

It’s a fun read… but I hope people take more from it than just “respect other people’s audiences.”

First, the most important lesson I’d take from this is to respect my own.

That means thinking just a little about the value to my readers of everything I post. It means asking myself when I have a conflict of interest, real, potential or perceived. It means looking for the line between self-expression and self-indulgence.

And the other lesson I hope we can take to heart is this: forget ineffective for a moment. Ask yourself if what you’re doing is right.

I’d argue that a PR pitch that ignores the subject matter of a blog is off-base, but not necessarily unethical. The same isn’t true of a lot of the behaviour in the pitches I’m seeing these days — a strain of search-engine “optimization” that actually amounts to search-engine sabotage

Business models that rely on deceit are wrong, whether it’s three-card monte, phone scams or black-hat SEO.

It’s wrong to game search engines to produce results that aren’t as relevant to a user’s search. It’s wrong to trick people into clicking on links to your content.

And I think maybe it’s the fact that you sometimes have to be a little clever to outsmart Google’s algorithms or a site’s users that obscures the fact that even clever can be wrong.

Respect for your audience makes a lot possible: real connection and communication, genuine community, and yes, sales and profit. But it also rules a lot out.

Posted via email from Rob Cottingham’s posterous

4 May 2012

Social Speech Podcast, Episode 7: Chris Brogan

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For several years now, Chris Brogan’s blog has been a must-read for anyone who wants to use social media productively. Add his thriving practice as a speaker, the fact that he co-founded PodCamp, and his New York Times bestseller Trust Agents (cowritten with Julien Smith) along with two other books (Google+ for Business: How Google’s Social Network Changes Everything and Social Media 101)…

and his now-legendary 2009 presentation at New Media Atlanta, where he brought an angry backchannel into the open and won it over…

…and you have a shoo-in for the social speech hall of fame — not to mention someone well worth listening to on the subject of social media and public speaking.

Especially because he’ll explain what you, as a speaker, can have in common with the Grateful Dead.

The links:


27 Apr 2012

Turning a cartoon into a completely different experience with Prezi

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Category: Everything Else

A high-school-era friend of mine, Waldo Rochow, recently did something astonishing to one of my cartoon-blog posts from the Nonprofit Technology Conference earlier this month.

Here’s the original. …And now, check this out:

Posted via email from Rob Cottingham’s posterous

26 Apr 2012

I’m able to make this appear on my screen just by thinking “Hmm… when did I last save?”

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Category: Everything Else

23 Apr 2012

Social Speech Podcast, Episode 6: Mitch Joel

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Mitch Joel has a lot to share with the world – including some brilliant insights and expertise on marketing, communications and community – so it’s now wonder he’s found so many ways to do it. He has a long-standing blog, a podcast that just passed the 300-episode milestone, a book… and a well-deserved reputation as one of the best keynote speakers around.

In our conversation, Mitch talks about what matters the most to him about social media and speaking, and the sheer miracle of being able to press “publish” on a blog post and share your knowledge with the world. “These are such early days, and we haven’t spent the time to appreciate the tremendous canvas we have in the palm of our hands,” he says.

Little-known Mitch Joel podcasts

Some links from our conversation:

The image on the right is a doodle I did a year or two ago.

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. Please attribute to Rob Cottingham with a link to the content's original page on this web site. For more information, contact Rob at rob@robcottingham.ca.

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