How full-time YouTube users are making profit

MANILA There are a lot of things YouTube users can do to maximize their own channels.

This is what the speakers from the popular video-hosting website YouTube said during a workshop held at the Mind Museum in Bonifacio Global City on Thursday.

The first ever Philippine YouTube Pop-Up Workshop aims to explain to YouTube users how they can effectively attract more subscribers and make a living just by uploading videos on their channels.

YouTube Philippines Content Partnerships Manger Trixie Canivel said that YouTube is a great platform for Filipinos because it is accessible to everyone.

Anyone can be on YouTube. A lot of people get on Youtube because they want to create videos about doing stuff that they love, she said.

Canivel cited the story of now-popular YouTuber Lloyd Cadena, whose series of video blogs online has attracted more than 175,000 subscribers. Cadenas videos prominently tackle topics related to romance, schooling and the local lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender community, among others.

She also said that what YouTube users do not know is that they can actually make profit just by posting videos on their channels.

What a lot of people dont know is that actually, you can turn that [your videos] into a business by turning ads on and monetizing your videos and working with sponsors to be able to really turn it to a viable opportunity for you, Canivel said.

An example of YouTube users who have enjoyed the monetizing feature of the website is real-life couple Jamvhille Sebastian and Paolinne Michelle Liggayu or more popularly known as Jamich. During the workshop, the couple admitted that during a one-month period, they are able to make a six-digit revenue out of the videos they upload.

Canivel, meanwhile, stressed that in order for YouTubers to attract more subscribers, they must work on developing their channels. For starters, YouTubers must establish authentic and unique channels which should be maintained on a regular basis. This, according to Canivel, is a sure way to build a strong fan base.

Read the original:

How full-time YouTube users are making profit

ReVu.Me collects team input on the fly

Its a common scenario: you have a document on which you need to get input from a team. After circulating it via email or the cloud, you gather comments piecemeal from various email threads, copy revisions, and maybe even phone calls. By the end you need a flowchart to keep it all straight.

ReVu.Me, a new cloud app from the web-based project management service Volerro, makes it easy to gather feedback on all sorts of documents from stakeholders while they chat or converse via an integrated teleconferencing service. Its a potentially useful tool for people who need inputbut not actual edits or changesfrom multiple team members.

Free for single documents (a Pro version supporting multiple documents in a single session, useful for complex projects, costs $3.99), ReVu.Me is a snap to set up on the fly. Simply upload a document (by dragging and dropping it or navigating to it), enter your email address and the addresses of collaborators, and youre in business. You can also simply email a document. ReVu.Mes invitation to collaborators includes a link to the document within the service.

ReVu.Me enables collaborators to provide feedback on a document in real time.

The service supports not only Microsoft Office and Adobe documents, but popular image and video formats. Creating a note is as easy as highlighting text or dragging the cursor to outline an area in red. Both actions produce a pop-up window in which you type a comment.

Comments are then saved in a right-hand pane, and links underneath a comment allow the comment creator to edit or remove the note. Other links support replying to a note (creating a thread underneath it) or assigning tasks based on the notea reminder of ReVu.Me parent Volerros robust project management service, a paid offering with calendars, screen sharing, a dashboard for accessing ReVu.Me documents, and other features.

A toolbar above the document and notes panes has buttons that let you zoom in or out of the document or fit it to the window size. Other buttons let you hide (or unhide) notes, print or email the document with notes, download the annotated document, or replace it by uploading a new version. The service supports versioning so you can see earlier incarnations of documents.

Collaboratorsanyone invited to create notesappear in small circular icons above the document and note panes; hovering over an icon shows whether the individual is online or not. Other buttons let you create chat windows or set up a conference bridge line, also free.

What you cant do in ReVu.Me is actually edit a document. The documents author must make any changes offline and then upload the revised document if further feedback is required. Thiscan be annoying if youre dealing with a lot of small edits that could be dealt with on the spot.

There are, of course, many situations in which document authors dont want others to be able to make changes, they just want or require feedback and/or signoff. For these scenariosmarketing teams come to mindReVu.Me provides a great, feature-rich platform for gathering input from a large number of concerned parties. That its free is the icing on the cake.

View original post here:

ReVu.Me collects team input on the fly

Humanism Center at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School is changing the face of medicine – Video


Humanism Center at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School is changing the face of medicine
support.rutgers.edu/moment As a fellow at the Healthcare Foundation Center for Humanism and Medicine, Aneesah McClinton is part of a movement to change the w...

By: OurRutgersOurFuture

More here:

Humanism Center at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School is changing the face of medicine - Video

SGA discuss possible osteopathic school

Published:Thursday, February 27, 2014

Updated:Thursday, February 27, 2014 12:02

Sarah Thompson, Staff Photographer

University police officer Staci Simpson came to the SGA meeting on Tuesday to inform the SGA of ways they can keep their bikes from being stolen. The information was given in regards to the recent increase in bike thefts.

Vice Chancellor of University Advancement Jason Penry spoke to SGA senators Tuesday night about the benefits of adding an osteopathic medical school to the A-State campus.

Penry said an osteopathic medical school would be a positive addition to the offerings of ASU-Jonesboro because of the educational opportunities it would present for students and the increased health care coverage it would provide for the Jonesboro region.

Health care access is much needed without question, Penry said. Adding a medical school on campus will increase the amount of local physicians and increase the accessibility of healthcare.

The economy of Jonesboro would be be boosted as well, Penry said. Over the next 10-15 years, the local economy could be the beneficiary of as much as $90 million in revenue from the proposed medical school.

Through the medical school, ASU students would have a direct line to becoming professional physicians. The construction of a medical school would open more doors for Arkansan and Delta region students who aspire to become doctors, according to Penry.

For every 10 students who apply for medical school, only one is accepted, Penry said. The limited number of medical schools in the country means that an A-State medical school could be a major addition to the osteopathic educational system.

See more here:

SGA discuss possible osteopathic school

Program Manager

Title: Program Manager Location: Hanoi, Vietnam Start Date: April 2014

The Harvard Medical School AIDS Initiative in Vietnam (HAIVN) is a collaboration between Harvard Medical School and its affiliated hospitals that seeks to increase the quality and quantity of health professionals working in HIV and related diseases in Vietnam. Through collaborations with the Vietnam Ministry of Health (MOH), Vietnam Administration for AIDS Control (VAAC), and Vietnamese medical universities in clinical training and mentoring, training in educational methods, health system improvement, and implementation research, we seek to build a sustainable high-quality healthcare work force.

HAIVN emphasizes country ownership of both program design and implementation, strategic coordination of international donors and development partners, and long-term sustainability

Overall Responsibilities:

HAIVN seeks an experienced physician and public health specialist to serve as Program Manager in our Hanoi office. The Program Manager will work closely with the in-country Medical Director and alongside the technical staff to design, implement, monitor, and evaluate HAIVN projects towards successful implementation and achievement of the project objectives. This is a senior position in the Hanoi office.

Specific Responsibilities:

Reporting: In-country Medical Director

Qualifications

Please send curriculum vitae and cover letter in English to Ms. Dang Trang Kieu at kieutrang@haivn.org by March 26, 2014

Read the original post:

Program Manager