Budgie-Tube - Videos - make

 
Videos with tag make
Results 1-10 of 38
 
03:27
03:27
03:27

Skepta - Make Peace Not War (Official Video)

Skepta_-_Make_Peace_Not_War_Official_Video_Out_Now

Channels: Music 

Added: 366 days ago by URBANEXTRAUK

Views: 97 | Comments: 0

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00:21
00:21
00:21

endermen make terrible neighbors

endermen make terrible neighbors

Channels: Games 

Added: 548 days ago by URBANEXTRAUK

Views: 62 | Comments: 0

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03:34
03:34
03:34

Cobra Starship: You Make Me Feel... ft. Sabi [OFFICIAL VIDEO]

Cobra Starship's music video for 'You Make Me Feel...' featuring Sabi from the album, Night Shades - available now on Decaydance / Fueled By Ramen. © 2011 WMG. Download the single and album now on iTunes: http://bit.ly/ppW89J and visit cobrastarship.com for more! Learn more about Sabi at http://officialsabi.com and follow @SabiSoundz on Twitter! Director: Kai Regan

Channels: Music 

Added: 618 days ago by vshare

Views: 295 | Comments: 0

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03:14
03:14
03:14

Usher - You Make Me Wanna...

Usher - You Make Me Wanna...

Channels: Music 

Added: 681 days ago by millermusic

Views: 276 | Comments: 0

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03:19
03:19
03:19

Talay Riley - Make You Mine

Music video by Talay Riley performing Make You Mine. (C) 2011 Sony Music Entertainment UK Limited

Channels: Music 

Added: 681 days ago by vshare

Views: 174 | Comments: 0

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39:20
39:20
39:20

Basic HTML and CSS Tutorial. Howto make website from scratch

You can put your site on the web using a free host http://blog.jimmyr.com/List_of_Webhosting_Companies_17_2008.php Yeah, it's long. #1 requested tutorial on my page is how to make your own site though. I guess it beats those "learn html in 24 hours" books in any case. See the freehosts below on how to put your page online. w3 html and css http://www.w3schools.com/html/ http://www.w3schools.com/css/default.asp Simple HTML/CSS Layout Examples http://blog.html.it/layoutgala/ http://www.code-sucks.com/css%20layouts/faux-css-layouts/ http://www.mycelly.com/ http://www.thenoodleincident.com/tutorials/box_lesson/boxes.html Simple CSS Formatter http://csstypeset.com/ HTML testing Sandbox http://htmlsandbox.com/ CSS cheat sheet http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=css+cheat+sheet&btnG=Search HTML Cheat sheet http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=html+cheat+sheet&btnG=Search Group that standardizes html http://www.w3.org/ MetaTags http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&pwst=1&sa=X&oi=spell&resnum=0&ct=result&cd=1&q=meta+tags&spell=1 doctype http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=doctype&btnG=Search Adding Images as backgrounds http://www.w3schools.com/css/css_background.asp RGB Color You can indicate color by using RGB mode too. eg. #336699 is a nice blue google likes to use. It stands for 33 red, 66 green, and 99 blue in hexadecimal. Here's a RGB color picker http://www.siteprocentral.com/html_color_code.html Domains cost money, like $10 a year usually or less. I'm not going to endorse any registrars. CSS rounded corners http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=css+rounded+corners&btnG=Search Change the look when printing (media) http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/media.html CSS Popular Pages http://del.icio.us/search/?fr=del_icio_us&p=css&type=all http://del.icio.us/search/?fr=del_icio_us&p=top+css&type=all HTML Validator http://validator.w3.org/ CSS Validator http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/ Some decent text editors http://www.context.cx/ http://www.pspad.com/ http://notepad-plus.sourceforge.net/uk/site.htm http://www.jedit.org/ http://www.scintilla.org/SciTE.html http://www.notetab.com/ html forums http://groups.google.com/group/alt.html/topics?lnk=gschg CSS Forums http://csscreator.com/?q=forum/ Info about "Lorem Ipsum" often seen on template pages http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorem_ipsum blah http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/radiolabs/2009/01/how_we_make_websites.shtml http://arbent.net/blog/css-tips-that-every-beginning-developer-should-know-about CSS Transparency IE filter:alpha(opacity=50); Firefox -moz-opacity:0.5; kde based browsers -khtml-opacity: 0.5; Safari opacity: 0.5; @@@{ "Group": "Programming", "JumpPoints": [ { "Description": "Standardizations Rant", "time": "04:21" }, { "Description": "List of Intervals and their note Distances", "time": "5:20" }, { "Description": "Using TrainEar.com", "time": "5:32" } ], "Subtitles": [ {"locale": "EN", "long": "English", "url": "http://youtube.jimmyr.com/subs/K3kC_lYLAZw_en.srt" }, {"locale": "ES", "long": "Spanish", "url": "http://youtube.jimmyr.com/subs/K3kC_lYLAZw_es.srt" } ], "Related": [ { "id": "afgyNp5HueQ", "description": PHP Tutorial" } ], "Tags": "HTML Tutorial, Learn HTML and CSS, CSS Tutorial, html video tutorial" }

Channels: Education & Instructional 

Added: 747 days ago by vshare

Views: 296 | Comments: 0

Not yet rated

 
00:00
00:00
00:00

How to Make Coffee

An informative look at how to use a Keurig coffee machine. Its highly technical and something the average person shouldn't attempt without assistance.

Channels: Education & Instructional 

Added: 817 days ago by vshare

Views: 270 | Comments: 0

Not yet rated

 
05:29
05:29
05:29

MAKE presents: The LED

Take a tour through the world of the light-emitting diode. Learn - who invented it, how to use it, and how to make your own. Collin Cunningham: People are fascinated by light. I mean just glancing over at a display of flashing lights can grab my attention. Do you ever remember sitting around a campfire? Staring at the flames and just being totally transfixed, almost like if you're watching TV. It's comforting, and it can even by hypnotic. Recently, technology has made creating light a whole lot easier to do. For that, we have this little guy to thank. The light emitting diode, or LED for short. LEDs have a lot of different uses, from a simple power on indicator to traffic signals. LEDs use about ten percent of the energy of a traditional light bulb, and they can last about thirty times longer. That makes them a pretty big hit with businesses looking to do large scale visual communication. The first person to ever report the effects of a light emitting diode was researching another form of communication. In 1907, a man by the name of H. J. Round was researching radio waves for Marconi Labs. He was using a device called a cats whisker detector, which no, does not contain any cats or part of cats. Round was searching for a sweet spot on a crystal silicon carbide when he noticed something odd. Part of the crystal started to glow, it lit up a pale yellow, and that was an LED. H. J. Round's crystal experiment was so cool and simple that I had to try it myself. So I got a piece of silicon carbide, then I hooked that up to the positive lead on my power supply. That's an alligator clip. I hooked a little sewing needle to the ground on my power supply. Then I began to search for light emitting zones. I built my own sort of cats whisker detector in order to keep the needle in place on a particularly bright spot I found. Now I can sit back and enjoy the warm glow of a homemade LED anytime I choose, even though it's pretty dim, but it's still cool. As far as we know, Round's research into light emitting crystals ended here, which is a shame because he was definitely on to something. But of course that's not the end of the story. Fifteen years later, in imperial Russia, a scientist and inventor named Oleg Vladmirovich Losev noticed that certain diodes in radios started to glow a bit when in use. Losev conducted a lot of heavy research and published his findings in several languages. But, sadly, they seem to have gone unnoticed. It wasn't until 1962, that a visible light emitting diode was made practical by Nick Holonyak working at General Electric. He's widely known as the father of the LED. The technology that Holonyak brought to the public is remarkably similar to our crystal experiment. A thin metal wire connects one side of the circuit to a small piece of semi-conductive material on the other side. The LED's two leads are cut to different lengths to show you how it should be connected. The longer is called the anode, and that connects to positive. The shorter is the cathode, and that goes to negative. To power an LED, you can just use a simple coin cell. This is a CR2032. And just make sure the longer lead is on the positive side, which is wider and smoother, and negative is on the other. If you plan to use a battery, let's say a nine volt, you'll also need a resistor to limit the current so we don't burn out the LED. Connect negative to the cathode, the shorter lead, and we'll put a 470 ohm resistor between the positive battery and the anode. For more useful info, check out the LED Center, and there's a lot of great history at the LED Museum. For all types of project ideas, info, and inspiration head over to Makezine.com.

Channels: Education & Instructional 

Added: 817 days ago by vshare

Views: 308 | Comments: 0

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06:44
06:44
06:44

How to make a fake tilt shift timelapse

Tutorial using Redgiant Software's Magic Bullet Looks. 20% off at www.redgiantsoftware.com with code bloom20 www.philipbloom.net

Channels: Education & Instructional 

Added: 817 days ago by vshare

Views: 211 | Comments: 0

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01:11
01:11
01:11

Make it better

We are starting the new year with some new projects, new goals and new challenges. Whatever you do, always try to be the best you can be. Spread the word. Good luck. ------------------------------ Created by: Climent Canal (Idea & design) www.climentcanal.com Sebastián Baptista (Animation) www.sebastianbap.com Audio by: Aimar Molero www.aimar-molero.com Thanks to: Oriol Gil Cake No-Domain

Channels: Arts & Animation 

Added: 817 days ago by vshare

Views: 226 | Comments: 0

Not yet rated