tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1474751880645498536.post2964133854780338457..comments2023-10-10T10:14:36.340-04:00Comments on Medical Evidence Blog: Narrated and Abridged: There is (No) Evidence for That: Epistemic Problems in Critical Care MedicineScott K. Aberegg, M.D., M.P.H.http://www.blogger.com/profile/17564774546019869201noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1474751880645498536.post-34891833435200647272016-01-08T22:18:29.852-05:002016-01-08T22:18:29.852-05:00Yes, I apologize for that. There is not a good wa...Yes, I apologize for that. There is not a good way to put narrated videos on the web right now. Slideshare doesn't allow the narration, you would have to do a podcast and post the ppt presentation separately. For some reason I can't upload to microsoft either. The best way I could find to preserve the changing of the slides and the pointer data with narration overlaid was to use a ppt function which converts to wmv video file which I can then upload to youtube. Unfortunately, it takes several hours to do the conversion and about a half hour to do the upload to youtube. Somewhere along that process, the files were corrupted, and I worry that redoing it will make it worse, so I'm electing to leave it as is. Hopefully it doesn't markedly disrupt the cogency of the presentation.Scott K. Aberegg, M.D., M.P.H.https://www.blogger.com/profile/17564774546019869201noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1474751880645498536.post-22284675460281687092015-12-28T12:47:29.913-05:002015-12-28T12:47:29.913-05:00Glitch: There's a brief narration overlap begi...Glitch: There's a brief narration overlap beginning at 7:18.JDPattennoreply@blogger.com