Dtube Vlog #6 Introducing Utopian.io to Online Instructors

in #dtube7 years ago


Online Instructors spend many hours making good quality video tutorials to publish both 'Free' on Youtube and 'Paid' in their courses.

Utopian.io rewards those that contribute to opensource projects and contributions can be tutorials and videos tutorials.

So if you each an opensource project such as Wordpress then you could consider posting some of your tutorials to Utopian

Posts approved by Utopian.io also received a vote from Utopian, which can greatly increase the reward on the post. The post is also open for other Steemit and Utopian users to vote on and reward.

This video is to give you a quick orientation and explanation on Utopian and how you can use it to earn crypto from your tutorials and video tutorials

If you like this video don't forget to Vote, Share and leave a comment below


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thanks for info @paulag

Great information @paulag

Nice one @paulag

utopian - open source tutorials

dtube - tutorials about open source tutorials :)

lol, sure you gotta give it a go! This one is for my fellow online instructors :-)

Enjoy the vote and reward!

Hi @paulag dtube only pays to video creators on steemit upvotes instead of views. I know views are easily manipulatable but it can't compete youtube in this way.

This video is not about Dtube, but utopian.io. I do understand what you are saying, but you have to remember that when youtube began it did not have a big audience. In time Dtube will grow and the audience will be bigger, but we all have our part to play in making it succeed.

Thank you so much for this. This makes things easier 💙💙

Excellent information. You rock, Paula :-)

We need to frame your head a bit higher into the inset because you seem to be falling out of the bottom. Eye-line needs to be at about the 1/3rd point down from the top, allowing for hair and the like.

We also need to get a diffuser on that light to the upper left; it's way too harsh on your face. Soften that, maybe put a piece of white board on the other side to bounce it back to fill some of the shadows, and we'll be golden.

I agree, this is not meant to be a professional video thou. I have no where to record for the next few weeks so I just have to make do with natural light and unedited audio

The nonprofessional videos are where we get all our really good practice, where it's safe to screw up and we get to grin about it afterwards and fix things. If you never have an opportunity to screw up, you never have the opportunity to get better.

Besides, Hades knows that I have put together enough "professional looking" production booths with stuff I found around a kitchen and living room, using a cell phone is the main camera, to know that you can do some amazing things when you get motivated. Hang some cheesecloth on the side where you need some diffusion, or tape it to the lamp/light. Get a piece of white poster board and prop it up off camera to the other side, so that the light splashes off of that and back onto your face indirectly, which will soften the transition along with the cheesecloth.

And depending on what you're using to shoot, we might actually have an editing tool that will work just well enough so that you can crop in a little bit if you feel like it needs it, etc.

I love working in "make do" scenarios. It's frustrating as Hell, but the results can be ridiculously fun.

Your audio was surprisingly good, and that's usually one of the first things that I jump on when it comes to video production. It was way better, if not light-years better, than some of the audio that I've heard going on Kickstarter in the last month. So that part seems pretty well nailed.

(Let's not even talk about the "temporary fixes" in my studio that somehow keep hanging on for years because they're cheap and they work. I'm rather fond of the PVC tube backdrop hanger, though.)