The Learny Bin
28Feb/120

Free File Transfer Services

Save yourself some time, some hassle, and some cash. No need to toss your files on a thumb drive, burn a CD, or send them bit by bit in a string of emails. Today, there are a lot of free options out there for transferring large files electronically that saves a lot of time and hassle.

Here are a few options (and personal reviews) of some services for transfering hundreds of megabytes, even gigabytes, of data for free. There are quite a few other file transfer options out there, but many require a fee.

SendUIt Logo

1. Senduit.com = I used to use SendUIT.com all the time because of how simple the website was, and it was once the best free option I had found. I stopped using it perhaps two years ago now when it started timing out on me. I've tried it a few times since, and haven't seen the issue fixed.

YouSendIt Logo

2. YouSendIt.com = I then switched to YouSendIt.com, which had allowed me to send 100MB files for free, though there site wasn't nearly as simple as the SendUIT site. About a year ago they dropped the limit from 100MB to 50MB for the transfer of free files. Since I regularly have to send files larger than this with all the video and interactive work I do, I jumped ship. Not a fan of paying for a service that was previously free.

WeTransfer.com logo

3. WeTransfer.com = Today, I use (and regularly recommend) WeTransfer.com. Why? It's simple, it's free, I can transfer files up to 2GB in size at a time, and they pay for their service through advertising (not subscriptions) so I don't have to worry about all the added annoyance of marketing emails and having to subscribe to yet another website. I'm a big fan. For more information about them, you can visit their site at WeTransfer.info.

 

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8Feb/120

eLearning Development: Prototype, Beta, Final

I'm trying a new thing with the blog to get myself into the habit of writing articles on a regular basis. I'm going to try to just write about topics while I'm actually doing different projects. I figured that might be a good way to go about things since the topic's fresh in my mind.

This week I have seven different courses that are in development and being reviewed. So I thought I'd talk about review cycles.

In a traditional/waterfall project model, there are typically three formal review cycles for an elearning course:

1. Prototype (aka. Alpha)
2. Beta
3. Final (aka. Gold, Live, Production)

1. Prototype

The prototype is a rough first pass at the module. It tends to be static, unfinished, and riddled with notes about what content will be there instead of containing some of the actual content (e.g., animations, videos, graphics, interactions). It's only done enough to give the client an idea of what the end product will look like. This way they get an early glimpse at the elearning to validate that it it's heading in the right direction, and it gives the development team a chance to course correct early if it's not headed in the right direction.

The prototype review should not be a thorough content review because the content isn't there. It's all mostly concepts and ideas. Instead, you should be reviewing a prototype for these three things:

1. The core content is there. (i.e., the right topics are being discussed though perhaps need more detail)
2. The flow is correct (i.e., the order of topics. slides flow clearly and logically.)
3. The look, feel, and overall vision appear to be heading in the right direction.

That's it. Nailing down these pieces will give you the skeleton you need to flesh out your content, and also give you a chance to make any necessary redesigns of the course before too much effort is wasted.

2. Beta

I usually tell clients that the beta is between 70-90% of the way to a final product. The purpose of the beta version is to give the clients a clear first viewing of the final course, minus a few (hopefully minor) elements. This way they have a clear picture of the end product and can provide you with all the necessary feedback you need to create the final product they want. So when you're developing your beta version, actually try to create the final product. This way you get all the feedback you need, and hopefully minimize the work needed to create the final version.

IMPORTANT: Time and again developers push all the work to the very end of the product, and this is what causes them to miss deadlines and fail to meet client's expectations. Avoid this by creating a solid beta!

When bringing your beta version to your clients for review, basically tell them to pull out all the stops - don't hold back any feedback. This should be the most rigorous and nit-picky review of the three. The last thing you want is for people to hold back until the final review, and then you feel broadsided with major changes when you thought you were nearing the end of the project.

3. Final

The final version, is (of course) intended to be the final version of the course. But this is rarely (read: never) the case. If you've done your beta and alpha reviews right, and managed your client's expectations well, then you should be about 95% done at this point and nearly all the changes should be minor after the final review because you would have gotten all the major changes out of the way in the beta.

When facilitating the final review of the elearning course, present it in a way that doesn't draw out feedback that wouldn't have been provided without your prompting. You can *always* change and improve ANY product. It's not about perfection. It's about achieving the project goals and client satisfaction. That said, do NOT squelch client feedback. If a client has feedback that would affect either the budget or deadline of the project, simply tell them how long the change would take and how much more it might cost (assuming it pushes the project out of scope) and let them decide what to do.

Important Sidebar

Many developers and consultants are too quick to call something a "Change Order" or "Scope Creep". I've (sadly) even seen some who deliberately underbid projects with the intent of adding charges in this manner later on once a client's locked in.  Sickening. I can happily say I've yet to have to do a change order for a project (though it's bound to happen eventually).  Instead of yelling "Scope Creep" at every turn, take the opportunity to go beyond your client's expectations.  Clients find this a breath of fresh air and they really appreciate when you put more effort into something than what's in the contract.  And, selfishly, I find this sort of customer service leads to repeat business.

The Ongoing Review Cycle

One last thing regarding reviews. I just presented you with a traditional, waterfall type approach to elearning development and the accompanying reviews. That said, this is not all you should be doing. In principle, a waterfall type plan looks great on paper, but I've never been involved in any project where things work just as planned in a waterfall type scenario. Projects that work best tend to be those that incorporate small, informal, ongoing development and review. Having mini-reviews with one or two stakeholders throughout the development process, will help the formal reviews go much more smoothly. The more you can involve clients outside the formal reviews, the more likely they will go as planned.

So that's the elearning development phase in a nut shell.  There's gads more detail I could add of course, but we'll save that kind of stuff for other posts.

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6Feb/120

Temporary Internet Files

I run into this with nearly every project I do, so I thought it’d be handy to have a quick little video tutorial up on the blog to refer people to, and to share with the world.

Here’s the scenario: Your web/elearning/interactive developer sends you a link to an updated version of your website/elearning course/interactive element. You launch said element in your browser and it looks just like it did before. What’s going on? Well, before you make the seemingly reasonable assumption that your developer didn’t really make the changes, you should understand a little something about internet browser’s and temporary internet files.

Every time you visit a website, you download files (HTML, Javascript, CSS, text, graphics, images, videos, audio, etc.) As a way of speeding up your internet browsing experience, these files are temporarily stored on your computer so that the next time you visit the same website it doesn’t take as long to load because you still have the files temporarily stored on your computer.

The reason this can cause problems is that when you visit a site often, your browser doesn’t always check to see if the files you have temporarily stored on your computer are the most current versions of those files, and instead displays the ones it had downloaded on a prior visit. So you may not be looking at the most current version of the website when you visit it. Crazy neh?

“So how do I fix this?” you ask.

There are several ways, but for those of you with Firefox as your browser, give the below steps a go (I’ll try to post how-tos for other browsers at a later date).

1. Go to your menu bar at the top of the window and click Tools > Clear Recent History (Or you can just Press CTRL+SHIFT+DELETE on your keyboard).
2. This popup will appear:

clear history in firefox

3. In the “Time range to clear:” drop-down menu, select “Today”.
4. Click “OK”. This will delete temporary internet files that have been stored on your computer so that the next time you visit a site you will
5. Your browser will slow for a few seconds while it completes this action.
6. Navigate to the page that wasn’t working for you, and you should now see the new content on it.

Hope that’s helpful.

2Feb/120

Hydropackulicity-challenge.com

hydropackulicity logo

*blows the dust off his blog*  *coughs profusely*

So things have been busy, which is good for the business, and bad for blogging.  Shame on me.  But I thought I should take a second and dust off our little blog here to help out my wonderful intern Gina Reed with a challenge she's in for one of her classes.

On the first day of class, Gina's professor (Jeff Lin) threw down a challenge to his student's to see who could achieve the best Google ranking for the word hydropackulicity.  Gina told me about this challenge,  and I immediately got excited.  I wanted in, but of course, I'm not allowed to play.  Boo.  In any case, I have to give props to her professor for giving his students an assignment that'll teach them real skills through actual application.  Really great idea.

With that, Gina's now in a race to the top of the rankings, and I thought I'd do what I can to help (and what I could do to get you folks to take a second and do the same).  I had a lot of people teach me things and support me when I was getting my degree (I'm sure you did too).  I thought this was one small way we all could pay it forward.

"What can I do to help?"  Glad you asked.

  1. Visit Her Website: Hydropackulicity-challenge.com
  2. Comment in her blog.
  3. +1, Tweet, Like her website: Hydropackulicity-challenge.com
  4. Post a link to her website in your own blog

As of now, she's appearing on page 2. Let's see if we can't get her to page 1, result 1.

-Dusty.

hydropackulicity-challenge.com search engine ranking

hydropackulicity-challenge.com search engine ranking

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13Oct/100

Four Free Simplification Tools for Entrepreneurs

As consultants and small business owners, it’s really easy to get behind on a lot of the administrative pieces of our businesses; finances, marketing, operations, etc.   Once we reach that nirvana of regular projects and heaps of billable hours, the time we need to manage our own business seems to shrink into nothingness.

What’s a busy entrepreneur to do?

Here are some tools that will not only get your day-to-day operations back on track, but will give you invaluable data for planning and goal setting for years to come.

If you’re like me, you’re not exactly brimming with glee to balance your checkbook, track expenses, and manage a regular budget for both your home and business.  With Mint.com, I’ve actually come to enjoy these tasks.  Mint’s ability to track all your loans, bank accounts, credit cards, debts, and assets in one location takes a lot of the time and effort out of managing finances.  That, and its interactive graphs and tools provide you with a clear view of the current state, as well as the past and future trends of your finances.

Tracking project hours can be a real pain, but Paymo makes it easy.  Up to three people can use a single account for free to track all their tasks and hours spent on all of their projects.  All you need to do is setup your project tasks and hit the stop and start button as you work.  Tracking my time in this way has been immensely helpful for estimating and budgeting project time.

Find out how many people visit your site, where they come from, how long they stay, what they’re interested in on your site, what they’re not, how they found you, and a myriad of other things.  Google Analytics is a fast, easy, visual, and free way to gain insights about your customers and your marketing initiatives.

HootSuite is a one-stop-shop for social media management and tracking.  Who has time to login to LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and their blog separately to send updates and posts?  HootSuite not only allows you to manage all these applications in one location, but also allows you to schedule future posts to be released at a later date – an extremely handy feature for social media management.

Regular use of these tools, and others, has enabled me to not only keep up with my day-to-day business operations, but has given me critical data for how to best invest my business’s time and money.

There’s much more that could be said and shared about these tools, but that’s all the space we should use for a humble blog post.  Perhaps I'll delve a bit deeper into each tool in some of my upcoming meanderings.

Cheers,

-Dusty.

1Jul/100

How to Record & Edit Audio for eLearning

I've been doing a bit of recording work recently so I decided to compile a handy how-to guide for audio recording for elearning.  The guide walks your through finding and setting up a recording space all the way through compressing the final audio files into MP3 format.  Just follow the below link and click on the "Audio Recording for eLearning Guide" link.

Audio Recording for eLearning Guide

Hope you find it useful.  I'd love any additions or feedback on it for improvement so do share.

Cheers,
-Dusty.

25Jun/100

What is HTML5?

HTML 5 ImageSo what's all the fuss about HTML5?  Put simply, HTML5 is the new coding standard for the internet which provides far greater support for web applications and interactions than ever before.  Translation: simpler development, greater cool factor, greater connectivity, more powerful websites.

HTML5 is still quite new so some of the links you may need to view in Google Chrome in order for them to operate well, but here are some helpful presentations, tutorials, and other stuff related to HTML5.

Dive Into HTML5 - A rather succinct and well-written explanation of HTML5 and why it's so nifty.  A good reference for the non-developers out there.

HTML5Rocks.com - Tutorials geared more toward the development and standards of HTML5.

Presentation: HTML5 Web Development to the Next Level - An interactive presentation that lets you play with many of the new features of HTML5. (You'll need to open this in Google Chrome to use all the interactive elements.  Other browsers don't support all of the HTML5 features quite yet.)

HTML5Gallery.com - Check out a growing gallery of  HTML5 websites.

Hope you find this somewhat enlightening at least.  Now, if only I had a little time to delve into some of my own development.

-Dusty.

16Jun/100

How to Plan an eLearning Project

Before cruising down the road to developing an elearning lesson, it's important to answer some key questions about it.  This will help you avoid pitfalls further down the road, and help match what you create with the needs and expectations of your client.

The below link takes you to a template I use to scope new projects.  Whether you're a developer or a project manager, answering all the questions within it will give you a very good idea of what and how you need to complete your project.  Keep in mind though that this is only an initial list of questions.  You'll need to answer more questions as you proceed through your project, but I've found this to be an excellent resource when working on elearning projects.  I hope you will too.

Initial Questionnaire for eLearning Development

Please feel free to take this template, redesign it, add to it, and otherwise do what you like with it.  Also, if you have any comments, improvements, or additions for it, I'd love to hear about them.  Always looking to improve my process. :)

-Dusty.

9Jun/100

How to Make a YouTube Channel Banner

YouTube's LogoPerhaps you're like me and just spent a few hours designing a new YouTube channel page for a client, and while doing this you saw all these other channels with these clickable banners at the top.  "Huh... that's weird," says you.  You dig around in the different design settings on your channel page and account page, but you can't seem to find a way to create one of these banners. Well, dear friend, I have bad news.  To have one of these banners on your YouTube channel page, you have to become a YouTube Partner.

To become a YouTube Partner, you must meet these minimum requirements:

  • You create original videos suitable for online streaming.
  • You own or have express permission to use and monetize all audio and video content that you upload—no exceptions.
  • You regularly upload videos that are viewed by thousands of YouTube users, or you publish popular or commercially successful videos in other ways (such as DVDs sold online).

"How lame is that!?" you exclaim.  And indeed it is.   I spent a good while looking for tutorials on creating these banners and found that the vast majority of them are outdated.  Finally, I found this video which enlightened me to the sad fact that I'm not among the folks who can create one of these banners... yet.

So, no instructions this time around, but perhaps this will save you the hassle of digging for this info on your own.

Cheers,

-Dusty.

9Jun/101

Internet Statistics Video: The State of the Internet

Stumbled across a great video on internet and social media statistics.  Interesting.

JESS3 / The State of The Internet from JESS3 on Vimeo.

-Dusty.

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