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RECENTLY I WROTE:
- A quick trip back to Sorrento
- Vimeo relaunches with new features
- You wait for a bus…
- The miniature world of London commuters
- Some sound advice
- LCDVF: an entry-level viewfinder for DSLR film-makers
- Time for a refresh
- Google+ gets a new lightbox
- Hampshire frozen in time (capsule)
- What the new Canon C300 can do
favourites
Archives
My Twitter updates
- Broken boiler update: +12 in the bedroom overnight. BUT my woollen hat can also be used as an eye mask, so all is good. posted 56 minutes ago
- RT @the99percent: The Counter-Intuitive Benefits of Small Time Blocks - http://t.co/xvbJR0lo #recent99 posted 18 hours ago
- So, whose Pinterest boards are worth following? posted 18 hours ago
- Saturday colours - red http://t.co/UQ1OzFFI posted 20 hours ago
- Saturday colours - orange http://t.co/nb3WbRdK posted 20 hours ago
- Lovely: Red Fox Pouncing in Snow by Tin Man http://t.co/9zeWYmVF posted 22 hours ago
photography
multimedia and photojournalism
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Tag Archives: vimeo
Vimeo relaunches with new features
Vimeo, the video-sharing site that’s not YouTube, revealed a new look today and a whole list of new features and updates.
The first thing you notice is that all videos are now big and looking lovely. It’s like switching from Flickr to 500px, if you know what I mean. I like it.
In a move slightly resembling the recent YouTube relaunch, Vimeo now displays a stream of the latest videos from your contacts and groups on your landing page. It’s called My Feed. Right next to it is a new Activity tab, which will remind you what you’ve done, watched or liked recently – or what your contacts have. But I particularly like the new Discover tab, which I’ll be visiting often to see what others have created. Discovering new – curated or otherwise recommended – videos on the site has always been my favourite activity as as a viewer on Vimeo, so I’m glad this option has been made a bit more prominent.
Prolific uploaders will be pleased to know Vimeo now supports multiple file uploads, which in theory means you should be able to add several files to your upload queue simultaneously. I haven’t tested the feature yet, so the most important question still remains open: has the upload speed improved too? Last time I uploaded something it was painfully slow and I guess my broadband provider was only partly to blame. But the video below seems to suggest the process should be less painful now.
There are also new options for those who prefer to download rather than upload. As you may know, Vimeo creates several versions of the file you upload (including ones optimised for mobile devices), but until today if you wanted to download the video, you could only get the (in many cases gigantic) original file, provided the owner enabled downloads.
Now you can choose from four versions: a mobile file, a SD .MP4 file, an HD .MP4 file or you can download the original file. That should be pretty useful.
Vimeo is still working on the new look, so not all features are perfect, for example, my embed options were not available at the time of writing.
Regardless of all that, it’s still my favourite video sharing site and a brilliant source of inspiration. See here for the full list of new features.
The story beyond the still
Just came across a fantastic HD video contest on Vimeo, called The Story Beyond the Still.
It’s sponsored by Canon and the winner can get either Canon 7D or 5D Mark II, there are also other prizes like Canon lenses or a trip to shoot a short film with one of the judges, and the author of the video which opens the series, Vincent Laforet.
So what is it all about?
It’s the first ever user-generated HD Video Contest where photographers become filmmakers, and we all see beyond the still. Last month the contest kicked off when Canon asked photographer, Vincent Laforet, to interpret a still by telling the story that lived beyond it using the Canon EOS 7D.
And here is his video:
And now the story continues. More from the site:
It was the first chapter of seven, ending with a still photograph of its own for the Vimeo community to then interpret. After 112 entries, Josh Thacker was chosen as the very first winner and now, once again the question is posed to you, what do you see beyond this still?
There are six more chapters to come, so really plenty of time to get creative and submit something equally intriguing. Among the judges is the brilliant Phillip Bloom, whose stunning HD videos are always beautifully shot and edited.
If you fancy submitting your video, there are only 4 days left to send the third chapter.














