Buns of Steel In Your Headlights – Gifs, Gifs and More Funny Gifs …
I just stumbled upon a lovely post by Cheezburger Network, posted yesterday, and entitled Buns of Steel In Your Headlights – Gifs, Gifs and More Funny Gifs … that I suggest you all read. Below are some extracts in order to pique your interest!
¡Hola Amigos! Bienvenidos a mi Casa de Animación « Previous Flaming Tetherball in Seattle | Bird Hats Still Needs Work Next » Submitted by: _C_A_T_Incorrect source or offensive?cargifsouchRabbit in your Headlightsthom yorkeUNKLE Email Copy & paste this:<a href="http://senorgif.memebase.com/2011/05/23/funny-gifs-of-steel-in-your-headlights/?utm_source=embed&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=sharewidget"><img class=’event-item-lol-image’ src=’http://chzgifs.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/bunsofsteelinyourheadlightsp1.gif’ title="Buns of Steel In Your Headlights Gif – Buns of Steel In Your Headlights" alt="Buns of Steel In Your Headlights Gif – Buns of Steel In Your Headlights" height="148px" width="351px" /></a><br />see more <a href="http://senorgif.memebase.
Now then, reading this post started me off thinking so I had a quick search around for some other articles on the subject and discovered some more goodposts. For example, A Question to Answer ? No/Incorrect Source … by Rupa Rajagopalan, posted back in 2010, on The Writers Gateway:
While its challenging to handle such a situation, you cannot avoid this at all. So here are some things you can do to finalize the content for your e-learning project, considering there is no Subject Matter Expert for the project: Keep the target audience in mind. Keep the course goal/objective in mind. Spend some time on Google and get a grip of the subject matter by reading stuff randomly. This will help you get comfortable with the subject. Refer to full length books on the subject matter.
[...]
Make a list of topics to cover. Research on each topic and put the raw content in a Word document. Discuss with your colleague or someone who has a clue on the subject and get an opinion. Stop at one point and freeze the content. There is no point doing endless research. You are not the subject matter and you know there are limitations.
[...]
Tell your Project Manager what you have been doing, the challenges you are facing and the possible solutions you can think of. Remember there is no point fretting and fuming. Do your best. In case things are not on working well or your client is not happy, escalate/get help. Your Project Manager or higher authorities will have to do something about it.
Another fantastic article came from Peter Kafka over on MediaMemo posted back in 2010 and entitled With a Big Push From Apple, HTML5 Video Wins the Web (But Not … which is also definitely worth reading!
” There’s not much to debate anymore. Video search engine MeFeedia, for instance, says that 54 percent of Web video is now compatible with HTML5. That’s more than double the tally the company had back in May–less than six months ago. And because MeFeedia’s numbers include old archival stuff that most people don’t watch, as well as big troves of Chinese video you’re unlikely to see, the practical number for most Web surfers is much higher. Then again, it isn’t hard to find Web video that isn’t compatible with your iPad or iPhone–or your Android handset from Google, either. And once you do, the fact that the clip is in the statistical minority won’t make you feel any better.
