48 blogs & 60 users

Posts Tagged ‘upload’

Updates and Features

August 9th, 2008

Having upgraded to WordPress µ 2.6 a very short while ago, there have been some changes to PersonalLog.

First, the “Theme Test Drive” function has been removed in favour of the new theme preview functionality built into the WordPress core. Previously, PersonalLog bloggers could go to Design » Theme Test Drive to show a specific theme for themselves. However, with the new built-in feature, all you have to do is click on the theme image, and you’ll be taken to your blog, shown with a particular theme. (Also, the themes are no longer cluttered on one page, and are separated into multiple pages.)

Second, the custom styling of the admin interface was removed because it was not fully compatible with recent versions of WordPress. Instead, the backend was reverted to the default style with several modifications: the navigation was moved to the very top, and drop-down menus were added. This design is more futureproof.

The Counterize plugin was removed because it did not integrate with WordPress 2.5, let alone 2.6. Thankfully, very few users were using it, and removing it decreased the size of the database tables as well. In the future, I’ll notify users using a particular plugin if I’m disabling it.

The WordPress Admin Bar was updated to a more recent version which has configurable options (see Settings » Admin Bar). It should streamline your blog administration tasks and look good as well.

Fifth, the Flash-based media uploader has caused a lot of grief for myself and others. Fortunately, in the new release of WordPress 2.6, all you have to do is click on “Try the Browser uploader instead” which will make the simple uploader the default method for your account.

Sixth, gravatar support was enhanced in 2.6, which means some themes (particularly newly added and future themes) will show little graphics beside the names of authors in comments.

Seventh, a number of themes were removed as a result of incompatibility and bad design. I’m also about to add a few more themes.

Eighth, some plugins were updated for 2.6, including HidePost.

Finally, you’ll also see some new functionality thanks to the WordPress update — every post is now saved with revisions, so if you save a post multiple times, each version will be retained. You can even compare revisions side-by-side with differences highlighted. There’s also word count in the Write Post screen, showing you the word count below the “Save” and “Publish” buttons. There is now also a Press This link (see the Shortcuts section on the Write Post page) that lets you write a blog post about any Web page, video, or image on the Internet; all you do is go to the page that you want to blog (be it a video or blog post), click on the Press This bookmark that you’ve added to your favourites, and a pop-up will appear from which you can write your post without leaving the page. Cool feature!

Try another video site

March 22nd, 2008

Tired of the restrictions on YouTube? Want to upload a video longer than 10 minutes or larger than 100 MB? Want better video quality for things like screencasts or game footage?

You might be one of those people that should use blip.tv. Amber MacArthur (a Canadian media personality) runs a video podcast called CommandN which is distributed using LibSyn and blip.tv. (Visit their blip.tv show page.)

I actually discovered blip.tv while listening to another podcast, net@night, featuring Leo Laporte and (you guessed it) Amber MacArthur. Leo Laporte himself has used it, but recently he is fooling around with Viddler, which lets you record yourself using a webcam.

Anyhow, if you use blip.tv, you can let others download the original video file (.avi, .mov, and so on) in the full, uncompressed form that you uploaded it, right from blip.tv without eating up your own site’s bandwidth. Additionally, your original video file could be huge (like 300 MB) and blip.tv still handles it well.

When blip.tv converts your file into the Adobe Flash video (.flv) format, it is still pretty good quality. That’s why I use it for my recent screen recordings. The quality is good enough that one can read the text on a screen recording.

If you have large multimedia files that you want to upload and share, maintaining a high quality, you’ve got to try blip.tv. YouTube simply can’t handle 1024×768 screen recordings, or HD video. (Well, they are going to support HD, but it’ll be a long time before you see truly high quality video.) Just a reminder: multimedia formats like .mp3, .mov, .avi, and so on cannot be uploaded to your storage space on PersonalLog. (This is for copyright, bandwidth, and content propriety concerns.)

We make it easy for you to use videos you’ve uploaded to blip.tv. Simply follow the instructions for blip.tv at http://www.daburna.de/dokuwiki/doku.php/instruction. NOTE: the video embedded by this method will not show your Show Player, which is a brandable, customizable interface.

Try it; visit blip.tv now.

ImageShack is now integrated

March 4th, 2008

I previously posted a Video Tutorial of uploading images to ImageShack. Now, why might you want to upload your pictures and graphics to ImageShack rather than, say, your storage space?

Recall that your storage space is limited to 25 MB by default, even though it can be upgraded to 1 GB.

There is no such limit on files on ImageShack, even though ONE image can only be up to 1.53 MB. But that’s larger than most web graphics; only if you were uploading some seriously large photos would you exceed 1.53 MB.

What’s nice about ImageShack is that you can hotlink directly to the image file. Thus, you won’t be penalized for eating up ImageShack’s bandwidth… and they won’t modify your original image file. This means that you can essentially upload animated GIF’s, PNG’s with alpha transparency, and so on… without losing that stuff, or the optimization that you might have done in ImageReady. ImageShack also doesn’t apply any logos or watermarks to your pictures.

Here are some screenshots of ImageShack integration on PersonalLog: (and the photos are hosted on Flickr)

Indicating the ImageShack tab in PersonalLog

The ImageShack upload tab in PersonalLog

Got large files? Put them on another host.

March 3rd, 2008

Unfortunately, we’re not Google, and we can’t offer you 6 GB on Gmail and 1 GB on your Blogger uploads.

Unfortunately, we’re not WordPress.com either (and we love them very much except for the huge bloated number of users), and you don’t get 3 GB for uploads.

But if you’re lucky, you don’t get the default 25 MB of space either. I am fully capable of upgrading the storage space allocated to each blog. Smash.Weblog — our newest high-volume site — has been given 100 MB. It’s not a lot, but it’s certainly enough for the amount of pictures that the usual text-based blogger needs.

You should note the following restrictions:

  • 25 MB storage space for the new blog; this can be increased to 1024 MB
  • 1500 KB maximum size per file
  • These file types are not permitted: mp3 mov avi wmv midi mid rar zip 7z exe mp4
    • Executable files
    • Archives
    • Multimedia files other than .swf (Flash)
  • These file types are permitted: jpg jpeg png gif bmp doc ppt xls docx pptx xlsx pdf swf (we’re willing to add more if you comment)

If you want to be sharing files (compliant with our Terms of Service, of course, which does not allow warez), software, or music, you might want to take a look at some of the following free file hosts:

While others are specialized to hosting pictures:

In the meantime, keep in mind that you are bound by the Terms of Service.