Interesting Information about Online Video Production & Distribution - Part One

Filed under: Lots Of Video Resources, Publishing, Marketing Infos — admin at 11:18 am on Saturday, November 29, 2008

The bright old Chinese proverb has a very strong implication; the catchphrase explained the fact that each and every person acknowledges an event a great deal if it is seen. Through video production or videography it is practical to capture a sequence of events.

At the present time in different commercial presentations, video recording is repetitively utilised. By using video production services it is feasible to offer the crucial info to quite a lot of different potential consumers to help convince them. Online Video production at present is employed for numerous purposes; however, more than a few promotional videos and awareness related presentations are usually made in order to achieve certain company objectives.

Audio video presentations are currently in vogue and are therefore used in almost any type of corporate activity. Video production agencies normally interact with a specific client or a firm that seeks to produce an online video commercial, a presentation or a series of video clips. The total work of video production is frequently carried out by individual freelancers; nonetheless there are a couple of online video production agencies around at the moment.

Input of music composers, cameraman & script writers can also be very common when creating internet video productions. Furthermore, marketing agencies & public relations agencies have very recently become involved with video publishing and distribution. If you are looking for a company that specialises in corporate video production in London then look no further than Vidify.

Solar, Wind And Nuclear Power — Alternative No More

Filed under: Lots Of Video Resources — admin at 6:04 pm on Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Are solar, wind and nuclear power an impractical pipe dream?
If you answered “yes,” it’s time to review and update your thinking.

Due to a global supply and demand imbalance, crude
oil prices are skyrocketing and will continue to do so
for years to come.

The price per barrel most likely will increase to $75 in a few months and easily top $100 this year, driving up consumer gas
prices.

No new oil refineries have been built in the USA since 1976, some 30 years ago. Existing American refineries operate at 99% capacity.

Globally, 50 to 70 more refineries need to be built in the next five years, as escalating demand from China and India increases global demand substantially.

To make matters worse, many of the largest supplier nations of crude oil are very politically unstable, rabidly
anti-American–or both.

Abrupt cutoffs are possible at a whim, driving down supply very dramatically and sending prices through the roof.

Some of these countries appear to have overstated their remaining supplies underground.

What, then, can be done? Are we doomed? No. Not at all.

History shows we had a similar problem in 1888. Whale oil ran out. Panic set in. Fishermen no longer could find whales to kill by harpoon. Whale oil was used in lamps.

America was close to utter darkness. But along came petroleum oils of the Industrial Revolution to save the day–just in time.

But nothing lasts forever and in abundant, inexpensive supply, including petroleum oil.

America’s way out of our energy situation now is the
continued use of crude oil—plus increased nuclear plants, solar, and wind power technologies.

All three are emission free, better for the environment, with no toxins to dump into the ground.

In bygone days of yore, solar and wind were dismissed as silly, costly “alternative” approaches.

Thanks to modern technology, nuclear, solar and wind energy costs are coming down speedily while the cost of petroleum escalates rapidly.

Nuclear plants can produce power at 1.72 cents per
kilowatt hour, far less than existing alternatives.

We need 103 new nuclear plants in the USA and 442 worldwide in 31 nations. Only 30 are under construction in the USA
now.

Technology has changed for the better, making nuclear plants far safer.

Uranium prices have increased—-great for investors. But uranium, needed for reactors, is almost everywhere in the world,
reducing our reliance on just a few flaky nations.

Solar panels, too, have improved and are being used much more. They can provide enough power from the sun to power a home or commercial building completely.

These are being used in new construction, and they are made
with exterior panels with a marvelous appearance which blend nicely into exterior appearance of the building.

Wind power is the third new big energy source. An article in the November 2005 “Lubes’n’Greases,” not exactly a looney tunes
publication, says that “fossil fuels are part of the Industrial Revolution.”

The magazine predicts that energy from wind power will reach 20% of all energy over time.

Of megawatts now produced from wind power, 36% comes from Germany, 18% from Spain, 14% from the USA, and 13% from the rest of the world.

Here again, improvements in technology and high petroleum prices make wind power practical and increasingly cost effective.

Why pay for power when the sun and wind provide it at no cost?

As you make or update your business or personal plans, do not expect that petroleum fuels will be either consistently abundant or believe that prices will be even close to stable–for the
next few years.

Plan to thrive on chaos. And view energy from a global perspective.

Understand that, within 10 years, solar, wind and nuclear energy will be widely available, helping America enjoy multiple sources of energy, still including petroleum products.

Do not dismiss wind, solar and nuclear energy. Learn all you can
about them, including how to make money investing
in the right opportunities.

If you approach the energy issue wisely, you can prosper as part of the solution, not part of the problem.

John Alquist - EzineArticles Expert Author

John J. Alquist owns and operates Alquist Enterprises, a firm offering consulting, business writing and professional speaking.
Visit John online at http://www.tell-it-well.com and email him at
john@tell-it-well.com