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Submitted by Thad Curtz on Wed, 10/29/2008 - 5:33pm.

Many YouTube videos have a little box on the right that says "URL" and "Embed". If you select all the text in the Embed box, turn off rich-text editing, and paste that text into your post, it should display and play the video.

On Google video, there's a link with "+Video" in the box on the top right of the page - if you click that a window opens up with similar code you can copy and paste to embed the video.

If you want to do this with some other video you found on the web, you need to understand more about what's going on. You might start by going to YouTube, copying both the "URL" information and the "Embed" information and pasting them into a word processor. If you look at them for a minute, you'll see that the "URL" information is the same as what's in the address window of your browser when you are playing the video. If you look carefully at the Embed information, you'll find that URL information twice in it, but slightly altered. (The ?v= in the address window has been changed to /v/ and &hl=en&fs=1 has been added to the very end.) If you get to where you can play the other video, copy the URL information from the address window in your browser, replace the URL info in your sample of the embed tags from YouTube with the new URL info, check for those two alterations, and then paste the revised code into your post, it might work...

If you want or need to know more, I think you'll probably need to Google something like "embed video html" without the quotes. You'll get lots of tutorials about these tags and what each piece of them does. There are a lot of ways to do this, and some complications about what works or doesn't work with different browsers, though...

Best,
Thad

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Submitted by Thad Curtz on Thu, 09/18/2008 - 10:12am.

A pretty confusing label. A "book" is just a section of OlyBlog like this one you're looking at; on OlyBlog, "Books" are collections of posts set up so other people are supposed to be able to add entries to the collection, edit what's there, move things around, etc. (So far, nobody's tried doing those collaborative things, so I don't even know if they actually can.)

OlyBlog inherited this confusing term from Drupal, the open source content management software that keeps track of and displays all the content for the blog.

Best,
Thad

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Submitted by Larissa Podzaline on Tue, 08/26/2008 - 9:17am.

Hello everybody,

I need some help at the Olympia Salvage cob couch site: I need experienced carpenters to help me build a roof over this bad boy. It's a simple affair, four posts, some braces and a small roof structure to protect the couch and its couchers from all the liquid sunshine we get.

I also need some material donations to the tune of: 4 4x4x10s and some 2x6s, 12' and 8' and some galvanized brackets that can weather the storms of Oly winter. Roofing material. What you got?

Experience the thrill of doing things for FREE for your community and put a big ol' smile on my face!

Contact me at brillaba@gmail.com if you are interested in being awesome.

Thank you,

Larissa

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Submitted by Thad Curtz on Mon, 08/25/2008 - 9:17pm.

First, you have to have a picture that's on-line somewhere. You can't upload one to OlyBlog directly, except for a picture of yourself in your account.

But you can include a picture that's on some other website. You can put the picture on your own webspace, if you have any. (You may well have some free web space if you have high speed Internet.) Or you can open an account on some free on-line photo sharing service like Flickr or Photobucket or Picasa, upload your photo there, and then include it. (I don't use a service like this, but other users may have advice about the pros and cons of different sites?

You need the actual address of the photo itself - not just the page it's on.

If you have that, and you're tagging yourself, you just put <img src="http://yourphotoaddress..."> in where you'd like it displayed. If you have rich-text enabled, you click the icon of a tree to get a little "Insert/edit Image" dialog window, and then you type or paste your photo's web address into the "Image URL" field in that window. (The editor will also give you a lot of options about adding a border, moving the image around on the page, changing the amount of white space between the image and the text, etc.) Here again, playing around when you aren't trying to actually get something posted and looking at the results of various choices using Preview may be the most enjoyable way to learn about the many options the editor offers.

If the actual web address of the image itself isn't obvious, you can use the View menu on your web browser and choose Page Source. This will give you a window, and it will probably look like a mess - pages of codes and tagging. But don't despair. Use Find and search for ".jpg", then go through the window with Find Next, looking for the photo you want. If you don't have any luck, try ".gif" and ".png".

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Submitted by Thad Curtz on Sun, 08/03/2008 - 8:33pm.

Everybody gets a big pink warning box every so often when they try to post. It comes from the database that the blog uses to store amd keep track of all the content, including your new post. It looks grisly.

For starters, try just ignoring it. If it showed up when you clicked the Preview button, but your post looks OK to you as it's displayed in the preview page, just go ahead and click Submit. If you click the Submit button and the pink warning box shows up, do something else for a couple of minutes and then go see if your post actually ended up where it was supposed to. In my experience, things seem to actually work, even when some version of this warning appears.

Best,
Thad

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Submitted by olympiaeventplanning on Tue, 03/11/2008 - 9:26am.
 
The Letter To The New York Times: 
As you said, Obama has gotten this far on hope. We, his supporters have heard his message and we want Barack Obama to know, we've got his back. For every negative campaign that Clinton puts out there, we will counter, not with an attack, but with a good deed. For every tactic of fear, we'll reach out to someone in need; for every attempt to divide on cultural and ethnic lines, we will cross those lines to demonstrate how interconnected we all are; for every sneer that's made at our message of hope, we will demonstrate how that hope brings communities together.
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Submitted by Kassey on Fri, 12/07/2007 - 6:28pm.

Due to the record breaking major flooding of the rivers, most notably the Chehalis River, there are many farmers who are looking to Olympia for Help. Some of the affected farmers are the local farms that supply the Olympia Farmer's Market, Olympia Co-op and other local business, have lost everything. They have lost their storage food, tractors, houses, etc."

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