NOTE: use Perl; is on undef hiatus. You can read content, but you can't post it. More info will be forthcoming forthcomingly.
All the Perl that's Practical to Extract and Report
Stories, comments, journals, and other submissions on use Perl; are Copyright 1998-2006, their respective owners.
How to put a tech talk on-line (Score:1)
I started writing a comment, but it ended up being rather long. It's now a full blog post. You can read it on my main blog [pjf.id.au] or here at use.perl [perl.org].
Reply to This
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
The really easy way is to get someone to video your talk, and then put the video up on-line.
Failing that, I find that editing the audio takes a huge amount of time. So if you skip that, and you don't mind there being the occasional flub or unwanted noise, you've saved plenty of time.
Given that you've only got 18 slides, I think using the slideshare slidecast tool will work fine for you. Provided you don't have your slide transitions closer than 10 seconds apart, it shouldn't have any problems. I a
Re: (Score:2)
I'm really looking for something that is independent of any website so I have a standalone movie. I think the audio is too large for SlideShare, anyway. I guess there isn't an easy way.
The really cool way would be to put the slides as album art in the MP3. I