 I did welwch i gyd yna, a mae'r intangod yn ymarfer. Mae hyn yn dda i ei wneud am y gwaith yng nghymru hynny'n gwneud beth. Rwyf yn ddweud eich cael cyfnod ar gweithio. Felly mae'n gweithio yn ei gweithio a'r ni, drydd i'r hynny'n gweithio'r gweithio. Ond yn deillu ar 14因為ll, os yw ddechreu am bobl ein meddwiol. Mae wneud o'r ffin dangos y ffigio. I'll just share some of the ideas and insights behind this so you know me like someone as a TDF and working with it or marketing and also community outreach as well so trying to get more and more people active in the project and videos of all the way to do that. Not everybody wants to sit down on blog posts or you know we do a quickie page about getting involved. So videos are absorbed a bit. And we've been working hard to improve our YouTube channel. So you can see this is the last 12 months of use on our YouTube channel. Mae ddwych y mynd i'w hwn o'i gymryd oherwydd, ac rwy'n ddechrau'n gweithio pwg wrth o'n meddwl'i casaith ym gyflwng adael, neu o'n gyflwng admai'r Gw chefs, mwy o'n digwydd a'i dweud cofio i ddechrau'n lleol yma o'r ymrwng, oherwydd o'n ffyrdd yma i'r Gwch Tysgrindig cyfrwyng, oherwydd o'n border lleol gan ffyrdd gan gyflwng, oherwydd o ffyrdd ym mwy o'r gwrthod, oherwydd o'r ffordd ym mwy o'n perthweithio pwg. mae'n meddwl i'r ffordd o'r holl ffordd o'r holl ddylch yn gwneud o'r unedig, oedd yma'r holl tair o'r holl ffordd o ffordd o'r holl i'r holl ffordd o'r holl. Rwy'n gweithio, mae'n gweithio am y ffordd o'r newydd a'r holl, roedd yn fwy o'r holl yma, mae'n gweithio. Donwt. Mae angen maen nhw ychwaneg i 190,000 ffwyd. Mae'r ddechrau'r rhaid, mae'n gwirionedd i gael swynd i fynd i fynd. Mae'r ddawn hefyd plein y cyflawn. Maen nhw'n dweud maen nhw'n cy chefs ac pob gwirionedd yn Cymru, mae nhw'n dwm ddweud maen nhw'n cychwyniaeth. Here we have the Gwark Express import feature. Very simple just zooming in to show it. Some features are not so easy to be picked in a short space of time. Here we have the customisation dialogue and updates I think done by Muhammad. The special characters dialogue that Italo just pointed out before. You can see a plain white background there, gently zooming in. A bit of animation there for such a video and not just a screenshot. The new icons as well. It's rotating, right? Ah yes, you can safely, yeah when you rotate an image you can safely rotate the original. OpenPGP, how to defeat this, it's not easy. So I just have to put a lock and I zoom in. It's not super imaginative but maybe one of you has a better idea how to defeat it. It's often very, very hard to, in a short space of time, to defeat technical features. You think everybody has a really short attention span on the internet. Yeah, people don't want to spend more than three seconds but they've got something to work on. Now, there's the help as well that we worked on. So we start talking about general features that affect all of the sweets and then we want to specific things in writer, so the table starts as well. And the whole video is about four minutes long, which I think is a reasonable time for a new features video. I think if you want to go a lot longer than that, it's best to bring the lock into individual videos or writer to help and impress. Because I'll show you now again the attention span of people watching videos. It does change. So, here we have some statistics. These are statistics from the first 90 days of that, we got the 6.0 new features video. So, you can see a big spike of activity at the beginning of the watch time. The average view duration, even though the video is four minutes long, is only two minutes and 15 seconds. So, you know, I can take that as an insult and think, well, down people are watching the second part of the video. But that's averaging anything out, from the people who watched the whole video to the first person who's like, library office, what's that? I'm not interested. So, this is just, again, the first 90 days. You can see the likes we have, the dislikes, because it doesn't have a feature somebody wants. They post and comment, you know, YouTube comments. It's upset about YouTube comments, like. I think, a couple of years ago, I think it was for April Fool's Day, April 1st, YouTube introduced a feature when, if you were posting a comment, it would read it back to you before you post it. So, the idea is to keep them just typing the usual nonsense, like, OMG, you know, I hate you. If I do play it back to them, they'd sit and they'd think, yeah, that is really a good thing to say. So, yeah, YouTube comments. I don't tend to interact with them that much. We have lots of positive comments. People who are like what we do appreciate that it's open source, but a lot of comments are like, no, it doesn't have this feature anyway. OK, whatever. A few more statistics about this 6.0 feature video. The geographies, so US is obviously very prominent there. The gender. Now, we know technology tends to be more male-dominated, but I don't know where YouTube gets these statistics from. Well, it's 100% male, and not my one, simply, most. That adds up to more than 100%. But I don't think they know. I would expect it to be more, slightly more male-dominated, but let's just ignore that. Traffic sources. This is very important as well, the playback locations. So, the blue chunk of people watching it on YouTube, directly on the YouTube site, but the yellow or orange or whatever, is embedded in other sites. And what Israel and I have done in press releases for the software is add this video link, and then news websites are then embedded in the video, so there's like soft media in ways that then tell a video into it, into their page. Because it's good for them as well, it keeps people on their sides. We all wait for people to see the video, but that's why it's a big chunk of the video. Viewers, especially in the start, are actually the videos embedded into news websites. So that's been really important for us as well. I suppose those embedded views are the included in your future views. We are reaching out to how we can use it also. It's really in the center. It's including those as well, yeah. Yeah, editing together. Because it's still YouTube setting the data. It's not like the new site makes a copy of it. It's just like a framing site. But yeah, some of those are included as well. Now, this is the duration of the video on how many people are still watching it through that duration. It's zero seconds. 100% of people are watching it, you know, as you would hope. But look how quickly it drops. In the first 10 seconds, you've gone down to like 88% of your viewers. 12% of viewers just drop off in the first 10 seconds. So that's what you've got to be really, really quick in getting people's attention. It will always be in a certain drop-off as well. People just click on things. They don't know what they're doing. So really, again, you can, as a video maker, you can look at this and think it's rather depressing. You think, well, you know, after the two-minute mark, only 60% of people are still watching. But again, people have short attention spans. I don't take it personally. I noticed before, it goes slightly over here. And this is where we show a new icon set. So we retain people a bit longer when we show new icons. So I have to look at that to the bits where it drops more quickly. Maybe this is a really boring feature. Or it looks boring, like some over-PGP thing. But it's not boring. It looks at it the way I depicted it. Then we look more at people just floating. But yeah, YouTube provides all these kinds of statistics for all their videos. And yeah, this is why, at the start, it's really important to get people interested. You may have seen the Prampton and the Taiwanese community made a 30-second video about the Eropyst acroe, which is really, really awesome. Super active, lively, loads of Easter eggs and things. But then we made a 10-second version that we put to the start of the Eropyst 6.1 feature video. You may have seen that as well. So super quick. It will be nice to have more, but really, given that people drop off quickly, we've all got to squeeze that into 10 seconds. So it looks good. It's great branding. But yeah, anything longer, and people end up like, where's the content? Where's this? So from my experience of making videos in the last two years, here's my compilation of top tips. Again, I'm no expert in this. I've learned and improved things along the way. So, as mentioned, the 5-10-second intro, if you look at lots of tech bloggers or vloggers, they don't have big fancy intros at all. Videos from other software companies as well, they get really quickly into it. Tell the audience straight away what it's about. No big meandering into the double show or trying to squeeze in another message. This is what you're going to see. They go again into tech bloggers, moxing a MacBook Pro or something. Hey guys, I've got a brand new MacBook Pro. They say that right at the start. Make sure people know. Give them the signpost. I do use background music in the new features videos. So the soft, generic, corporate type of music, non-offensive, doesn't mean anything. But it adds something a bit more than just a voice. And I always bring this down to about 10% of the overall voice volume. So it's just there in the background with a soft kind of melody. And yeah, CC Mixta, maybe in some of you have heard of this, it's a creative commons music site and it's a really, really good resource for finding this type of generic, meaningless background music that fits a video. It's about people that's not too exciting, not too quiet, not sad kind of, sad piece of classical music, but something you would hear in a jazz lab or something like that. Clear voice as well is super important. Get a good microphone and a pop filter. So the pop filter is a small circle with some kind of material in it that stops your breath from going when you're talking as well. B sounds and B sounds, the explosive sounds. If you don't have one, then just speak next to the microphone or speak like this so you're not directly into it. But it doesn't, if you want to make videos, you don't need a super expensive microphone. My microphone, I should have brought it, is I think 20, cost 20 euros, USB microphone. I do some podcasts as well and I use it for that. The audio guy says it's fine. You don't need to spend huge amounts of money on audio hardware to have pretty decent audio. Speak close to the microphone. I've heard lots of videos, I've seen lots of videos, that are really good videos, but the person doing the voice over sounds like they're 10 meters away and there's lots of echo as well, so this room is an idea to speak really, really close to the microphone. When people are listening with headphones on, they want to feel like you're in the same room speaking next to them as well. Showing features on a clean white background like you saw in the video before, just shows the opposite of the white background. I just changed it, there's some wallpaper into white and then start filming or taking screenshots. And also on this topic, you may have seen in those videos and some of the people have commented why do you have such a low resolution? Here I have a retina display, why do I shrink the leap off this window down? Because people are watching these videos on mobile devices. I've seen some really good leap off this community videos, but don't want an absolutely enormous resolution. They're trying to show a feature and you can barely see it. They're like squinting or trying to zoom in yourself and if they're not zooming in in the video, it's difficult. I go for a smaller leap off this window, but somebody sitting in their bed with their phone on their tablet can still get something out of the video as well. So it's a bit of a trade-off. Zooming in and planning in to show specific elements and you can see that in the video as well. A bit of variety, sometimes you have a static screen shot, sometimes you have some movement as well. And a call to action at the end. This is especially useful in our community videos. Don't just show what you do, but ask people to get involved, download the software, try it out, help them with this as well. For those 50% who make it to the end, as we saw in my graph, then give them something to do at the end. Don't just stop and leave them like now what. Make them feel like this is just the beginning, there's another step as well, there's something more you can do. So that's it for my rather short presentation. I didn't want to bore you with all the history of making videos, things like that. Just share my experiences and some of the tips and tricks that I learned. But tell me, I'd like to hear from you, what do you think of the videos? What kind of videos should we make? Should we make more of a certain type of videos? Is there anything we're missing? Is there anything that's hard to localise? Yep. Is it possible to make videos that are higher than what we're operating? For operating? For the ground? Yes, I don't want to turn your audience into what I'm on, something like that. I'm not turning a part of it. I'm just giving it a bit of a spirit at the highest. Yeah. So if I'm going to say, videos about the ground, what kind of videos could we make focusing on the ground? So we have the document foundation, but at the moment that's pretty much the office and the document liberation project as well. I don't know, I think what your video is better for the ground, is the video you made or the place store. If you will place something on this viewer. My original idea was rather tame to show some screen shots, show some features, a frangin came on and said, well, we could do that, but let's shout about the podcast and show lots of other exciting things as well. I think that video is probably more about branding, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Then let's put it on the channel, but it's breaking the ground. Yeah, branding. Yeah. Maybe there are some more creative things we can do than just showing the software itself. So again, if anybody has ideas, then why are we waiting? Any other thoughts or questions or comments? Any YouTube style comments to read us? I've been following the videos and the approach in the beginning, in order to look at the videos, you were surprised at them. Yes. I can do that, but somebody sent me the audio data and sent it, as well. Gabriela, from the Italian community, has done this a couple of times because he's done audio voice-overs before. He knows about this thing. I don't have enough time to start completely editing the video again and stretching bits out. Some languages are stretching bits out, and some languages take longer to explain something than others. German sentences tend to be longer than English sentences. But that is possible. When I make a video, I can just take away the audio voice-over and if somebody wants to send me an audio track of another language, that's great. Then I can just drop it in, but it has to match. So that's more work from your side. It really has to match. I can't start stretching bits of the video around it. It simply takes quite a bit of time. Yes. The current sort of workflow is, I make a video, I put the English subtitles on there, put the English subtitles on the wiki, which then opens them to the translations. We get lots of translations with communities fantastic. For the 6.4 video, I think we have 19 different languages, like from all over the world. So that is brilliant. That is a great way to show that we are an international project. But even better would be voice-overs. Yes. But I cannot speak English and German with an English accent. So I'm not going to... I did make one video with me speaking German. Okay, where's the list of icons? Yeah. Dog. Dog? Any other thoughts? ideas?