Sending Video Clips
on Wall Street Journal
by Lan N. Nguyen, June 20, 2006
The Problem: Emailing video clips to family and friends without jamming your computer -- or theirs.
The Solution: Instead of emailing the clip, turn to one of several free video-sharing Web sites, such as VideoEgg.com, YouTube.com and Jumpcut.com.
Uploading to these Web sites from the home computer, digital camera or camera-phone is fairly simple. They also make it easy to share with others. After uploading your clip on YouTube, click on "share this video" and an invitation will be sent to the desired email addresses (although recipients must join YouTube.)
If emailing is still your preferred choice, prevent the large file from getting stuck in your send box by uploading to a site that can handle such files, like Dropload.com or YouSendit.com. At Dropload.com, for instance, attach the clip (up to 100 MB) to an email and send. The recipient, without having to join, has seven days to download the file to his computer.
by Lan N. Nguyen, June 20, 2006
The Problem: Emailing video clips to family and friends without jamming your computer -- or theirs.
The Solution: Instead of emailing the clip, turn to one of several free video-sharing Web sites, such as VideoEgg.com, YouTube.com and Jumpcut.com.
Uploading to these Web sites from the home computer, digital camera or camera-phone is fairly simple. They also make it easy to share with others. After uploading your clip on YouTube, click on "share this video" and an invitation will be sent to the desired email addresses (although recipients must join YouTube.)
If emailing is still your preferred choice, prevent the large file from getting stuck in your send box by uploading to a site that can handle such files, like Dropload.com or YouSendit.com. At Dropload.com, for instance, attach the clip (up to 100 MB) to an email and send. The recipient, without having to join, has seven days to download the file to his computer.



0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home