 This is just a little news update on what I'm planning on doing with my channel, and I'm going to try something that I've tried in the past, but doing it a little bit different. In the past, I once or twice have tried to stick to a schedule, where each day of the week was a different video type. Example, Tuesdays were Terminal Tuesdays. Some of my viewers may remember that. It became too cumbersome. I couldn't produce videos fast enough at the time, and I was just making too many videos. I had a baby on the way at the time, so I kind of stopped doing that and just started releasing videos as I made them. Well, that kind of caused the problem is that I tend to make a lot of videos in one day, and then put them out over a period of time, and sometimes I end up getting a bunch of these videos that haven't been put out yet, so I end up putting them all out once, and then I realize I've run out of videos, and I don't have time to make new ones. So I think having somewhat of a set schedule will help me, but making it kind of a loose schedule so it's not very strict. So what I plan on doing is doing three videos each week, releasing them on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Each with a very loose topic, but each day having their own area of topic. What I mean by that is, for example, Wednesdays will be a Q&A video, basically. It will be me answering questions from viewers. Just kind of like I'm doing now, it will be me talking on a subject or a topic, expressing my views. I'm very surprised in the few videos I've done like that. People seem to really like them. I don't know why. People like hearing me talk about my opinions. But people seem to, so I figure I keep doing it because it really doesn't take any editing and then I can just record one in a couple of minutes and put it up. Other than that, Mondays will be, well, most of my viewers that have been with me for a long time are very interested in shell scripts, bash in particular, it seems, which was the original tutorials I started doing, and I've always tried to put out at least one shell script video a week. So Mondays will be what I would call a general Linux day. Most of the time it will be on shell commands or bash scripts or some sort of shell script. But it will mostly be on the inner workings of the Linux operating system, whether it be writing a bash script to automate stuff or just looking at where things are and how things work. So if you're one of those people who's interested in my bash scripts, my shell script tutorials, Mondays is going to be definitely the day that you're going to be interested in. And I've always tried to put out at least one of those a week as is, so now I just have a set day that I'll be putting those out. And then that will be Friday, which I would consider development day. So instead of just simple scripts that are shell scripts for automating the system, any type of development other than that, any other languages, whether it be PHP, Python, JavaScript, anything like that, or just designing applications, that will be Fridays. As an example, in a few weeks here I will be starting a series on basically taking any of your applications and different ways of packaging for different operating systems. And to be more specific in this tutorial we will be creating a very simple web application using JavaScript, jQuery, mobile, some CSS and HTML as a front end and of course you could always use whatever language you want in the back end when it comes to a web application like that. But packaging up so that it is an application that can be run locally or at least seem run locally. What I mean by that is you'll either be able to package the entire application up and distribute it or you'll package it up and it will seem like a local application but still be running off a web server. And I'll be showing how to do this for pretty much every operating system out there. I'll show you ways that are cross-platform for desktops so there will be a few ways that will work once you do it that way. It will work for Windows, Mac, Linux, BSD, whatever. And I will also be showing ways to package up the applications for mobile devices. Mobile, Android, iPhone, Windows, mobile. So that is what that series is going to be on. It's going to be going on for probably like once again on Fridays for two to three months I see myself making that many tutorials on it because there's a number of ways of doing it and it's all taking the same program and just distributing it differently. And so my point in making this series is kind of point out that a lot of people think that when you write a program you write it for a specific operating system which isn't true. When you write a program, most programming languages are written in C and C before it's compiled into binary all C code is converted to assembly. So essentially regardless of what programming language you are eventually it becomes assembly before it becomes binary and since everything is assembly everything is pretty much the same. Once again my point in this is showing most of the time when you're writing a program unless it's very low level or very operating specific example if you want to write a program that adds Windows registry it's really no reason to make it run on Linux unless you want to add your Windows registry from Linux which there is actually a program to do that. But that's just an example in general. If you're working basically if you're writing something that interacts directly with the operating system then there's really no reason to make sure that it's cross platform in most cases. But a majority of times you're writing an application that users are going to use for general use you write that program right once you write it right regardless of what operating or regardless of what operating system they're using and what language you're writing in within general I mean obviously something like visual basic isn't going to work on all operating systems but if you write something in bash you write something in C, C++, Perl, Python these are cross platform programming languages and the hard part though is packaging it up so that you have all the files you need for the different operating systems and that's basically what I'm going to show you how to do in these series. So I hope you enjoy that series I've worked very hard on it I'm still working on it and as I said it's probably going to be two to three months long every Friday so there's probably going to be eight to twelve videos on that topic so look forward to that I look forward to this new schedule we'll be doing that for a while and if it works out I'll continue doing it so thank you again for watching please visit my website that's filmsbychris.com there should be a link in the description that's Chris with a K and I hope that you have a great day