By Michael W. Dean
Your videos got their 15 minutes of fame on YouTube. Now what? Follow this straightforward intro to RSS syndication and you can make your videos downloadable, savable, and playable on the millions of iPods out there.
Duane Nickull is back with episode 10 of Duane's World. This episode features Clive Goodinson talking about AJAX, Flash, Pixton, PHP and other technologies. It also includes a demo of Pixton which is a comic book animator.
Mike Chambers announced today that pieces of the next version of AIR, version 1.5 ("Cosmo"), are now available with the nightly Flex SDK builds. Mike also includes a list of the new features in AIR 1.5 in the blog post.
Here's a quick tip for anyone developing AIR applications. You may often find scenarios where you need to display metadata about your application inside the application itself, from the application descriptor xml file. This tip will show you exactly how to access application descriptor information.
Attention AIR developers, if you haven't yet contributed to the AIR cookbook, it is not too late. You could still contribute and win a fantastic prize. The deadline for entries is September 26, 2008.
To contribute please visit https://www.adobe.com/devnet/air/?navID=cookbook
The majority of famous painters “illuminated” their subjects from above and to the left. For whatever reason, we seem to like that kind of lighting. Here are three of my pictures that illustrate that lighting technique. Hey, if it works for famous painters and if it works for me, it will work for you!
In very low light and at night, your eyes have an ISO of about 800. Mid-range digital SLRs have a high ISO setting of 1600, and high-end SLRs have high ISO settings of 1600, 3200 and even 6400! So in effect, a camera can see better at night that you can - so don’t stop taking pictures when the light gets low and when the sun goes down.
Douglas Crockford's book "JavaScript: The Good Parts" describes a powerful subset of JavaScript that uses only the "good parts" of JavaScript and ignores the rest.
Your videos got their 15 minutes of fame on YouTube. Now what? Follow this straightforward intro to RSS syndication and you can make your videos downloadable, savable, and playable on the millions of iPods out there.
Want to play MP3s on your site (or others')? Here's a super-easy way, an easy yet highly customizable way, and an offbeat experimental way — and each one is free. From one-click page-hacking to automatic e-commerce, these three web audio players point the way to a musical online future.
Don't settle for cruddy looking, dismal sounding YouTube video. Follow our insider tips and you can upload, watch, and share movies that look and sound dramatically better. We even explain how to make the ultimate poster frame or "money shot."
In parts of the Flash community, ActionScript 3.0 seems to have gained a reputation for being hard - particularly among those who have not yet tried the new language. Colin Moock, author of Essential ActionScript 3.0, explores this issue and offers code examples comparing earlier versions of ActionScript to version 3.0.
QuickTime is still the best-looking, most flexible way to present video on the web. Here's how to present multiple movies on a single page, launch a movie in fullscreen mode, and even play a sequence of movies automatically.
Our simple tutorial on building an online MP3 player inspired hundreds of you to ask for enhanced features. Now you can grab our latest code and experiment yourself.