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Around the web – November 11, 2007

Another busy week. What was I up to? Well other than a lot of stuff at the day job, it was also a somewhat busy online week.

First of all, it was an amazing week at Bioscreencast. Since the Bioscreencast blog is awaiting a new self-hosted home and I haven’t had the time to get to it, I’ve used bbgm to blog about screencasts on Papers and our 100th upload.

I recorded a screencast about the latest service I have been drawn to; Seesmic. As an aside while I still recommend Camtasia (for those who can afford it) for screencasting, Jing is just amazingly simple to use (that’s what I used for the Seesmic screencast).

Over at TechBizMedia, I blogged about the battle in the clouds, and talked about why sometimes “better” just doesn’t cut it

Other places of interest might be my Google shared items, a fairly active Twitter stream, and my Tumblelog, which captures posts from here and other various images and thoughts

Of course, I continue to use Kyte.tv as my main video broadcasting vehicle

Late addition: Attila asked me about my writing style. Here’s what I came up with :)

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4 Comments

  1. Posted November 12, 2007 at 09:34 | Permalink

    Jing looks very interesting – what are the limitations compared to Camtasia?

  2. Posted November 12, 2007 at 11:34 | Permalink

    Jing looks very interesting – what are the limitations compared to Camtasia?

  3. Posted November 12, 2007 at 10:57 | Permalink

    First limitation, swf only at this point of time. The options available are a fraction of what you get with camtasia. The killer feature is ease of use. it’s significantly more lightweight, and for informal screencasting, I’d say its the cats whiskers. Oh .. and, for now at least, its free (but I’d pay snagit level money for it)

  4. Posted November 12, 2007 at 12:57 | Permalink

    First limitation, swf only at this point of time. The options available are a fraction of what you get with camtasia. The killer feature is ease of use. it's significantly more lightweight, and for informal screencasting, I'd say its the cats whiskers. Oh .. and, for now at least, its free (but I'd pay snagit level money for it)

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