Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label YouTube

Blogging vs Vlogging: Which Is Right for You in 2026?

Short answer: blogging is writing published on a website; vlogging is video, usually on YouTube. Blogging suits writers, is cheaper to start, and wins for how-to and search traffic; vlogging suits people comfortable on camera and builds a more personal connection. Neither is "better", it depends on your strengths and goals. Here is a clear comparison to help you choose. The core difference A blog delivers value through text (and images) that people find via search and read at their own pace. A vlog delivers it through video, watched on YouTube or social platforms. They reach audiences differently and reward different skills. Blogging vs vlogging, compared Factor Blogging Vlogging Main skill Writing, SEO On-camera, video editing Startup cost Low (hosting/domain) Higher (camera, mic, editing) Discovery Google search, evergreen YouTube/social algorithm Connection Informational Personal, face and voice Time per piece Writing + publishing Filming + heavy editing ...

Fun Things to Do While a Video Loads (Hidden Games and Tricks)

Short answer: when a video buffers or a page is slow to load, you can pass the time with hidden browser games, no download needed. The most reliable is Chrome's offline dinosaur game (press Space when you see the "no internet" dino), plus various built-in and search easter-egg games. Here are the best ones to keep handy. The classic: Chrome's offline dino game When Chrome has no connection, it shows a little dinosaur. Press Space (or tap it on mobile) and it becomes an endless runner, jump cacti and dodge birds. You can even play it anytime by typing chrome://dino in the address bar. It is the perfect boredom-killer while waiting on a bad connection. Google search easter-egg games Search "Snake game" on Google, an official playable Snake appears right in the results. Search "Pac-Man" or "Solitaire" or "Tic Tac Toe" , Google has playable versions built in. Search "Minesweeper" for the classic, in the br...

How to Add a YouTube Subscribe Button to Your Website

Short answer: add an official YouTube Subscribe button to your site by generating the embed code from Google's Subscribe Button tool, then pasting it into your page's HTML. It shows a one-click subscribe button (with your subscriber count) so visitors can follow your channel without leaving your site. Here is how. Step 1: Generate the button code Go to Google's YouTube Subscribe Button configuration tool. Enter your channel name or ID. Choose the layout (full, with subscriber count, or default) and theme. Copy the generated code snippet. Step 2: Paste it into your website Paste the code where you want the button, in an HTML block: WordPress: use a Custom HTML block. Blogger: switch the editor to HTML view, or add an HTML/JavaScript gadget in Layout. Static site: paste it directly into your HTML. The button renders live and lets visitors subscribe in one click. Also link your videos and channel Embed a video: use YouTube's Share > Embed cod...

How to Embed YouTube Videos Without Slowing Down Your Website

Short answer: a standard YouTube embed loads a lot of heavy scripts even before anyone clicks play, slowing your page. The efficient method is a facade : show just a lightweight thumbnail, and only load the real YouTube player when the visitor clicks it. Here is how to do it and keep your site fast. Why the normal embed is slow The default YouTube iframe pulls in the full player, scripts and trackers on page load, whether or not anyone watches. On a page with several videos, that adds significant weight and hurts your load time and Core Web Vitals, all for videos most visitors may never play. The fix: a lazy-loaded facade A facade replaces the heavy iframe with a simple clickable thumbnail image plus a play button. The actual YouTube player only loads when the user clicks: The page loads a tiny image instead of the whole player. On click, the real embed swaps in and starts playing. Visitors who do not click never download the heavy player at all. How to add it Your se...

How to Find Free Full Movies on YouTube (Legally)

Short answer: YouTube has a large selection of free, legal, ad-supported full movies, both in its official Free Movies section and uploaded by studios. The trick is finding the legitimate ones and avoiding pirated uploads (which get removed and can be sketchy). Here is how to find good free movies on YouTube. Use YouTube's official free movies section YouTube has a dedicated Free with ads movies area (search "free movies" or look under the Movies & TV section / YouTube's free movies hub). These are licensed films you can watch free with a few ad breaks, completely legal, no download needed. Find studio and channel uploads Many studios and distributors post full films on their official channels for free. Search the movie name plus "full movie", then filter by channel to spot official uploads (verified channels, high production). Older and public-domain films are widely and legally available. Search tricks to find good ones Try this sear...

How to Insert a YouTube Video Into PowerPoint (Every Method)

Short answer: the easiest way to put a YouTube video in PowerPoint is Insert > Video > Online Video, then paste the YouTube link. For reliability when you present, you can also use the embed code, or download the video for fully offline playback. Here is every method and how to avoid the classic "it won't play" disaster on stage. Method 1: Insert > Online Video (easiest) In PowerPoint, go to the slide and click Insert > Video > Online Video . Paste the YouTube video URL and click Insert. Resize and position the video frame on your slide. This embeds a live player. It needs an internet connection to play during the presentation. Method 2: Use the embed code (more control) On YouTube, click Share > Embed and copy the code. In PowerPoint's Online Video dialog (or via the embed option), paste it. The embed code sometimes works when a plain URL does not, and lets you set a start time. Method 3: Download for offline playback (most reliable) ...

How YouTube View Counts Really Work (and Why They Sometimes Glitch)

Short answer: a YouTube view is not counted the instant a video loads. YouTube validates each view against its systems to filter out bots and reloads, which is why counts can lag, freeze, or briefly show odd numbers before they settle. When a video appears to have impossible views, it is almost always a display glitch, not a real count. Here is how it actually works. What counts as a view YouTube counts a view when a real person intentionally starts watching, and its systems decide the play is legitimate. Automated refreshes, bots and suspicious patterns are filtered out, so the public number you see is a validated count, not a raw hit counter. Why the count used to freeze at 301 For years, popular videos would stick at "301+" views. That was YouTube pausing the public number while it verified a sudden surge of views for fraud. Once verified, the real count updated. YouTube has since made this smoother, but the principle, validate before displaying, remains. Why glitch...

The Easiest Ways to Turn a YouTube Video Into a GIF

Short answer: the fastest way to make a GIF from a YouTube video is a URL trick: add "gif" into the video link (or use a site like Giphy's GIF maker) to jump straight into a GIF editor where you pick the start and length. Keep the clip short (a few seconds) to keep the GIF small. Here are the easiest methods. The URL trick (fastest) For a YouTube video, some GIF tools let you edit by URL: Copy the YouTube video link. Go to Giphy's GIF Maker (or a similar tool) and paste the link. Set the start time and duration for the clip you want. Add captions if you like, then create and download the GIF. No download of the video required, you clip it straight from the link. Other easy tools ezgif , paste a video URL or upload a clip, then convert and optimize. Giphy and Tenor, quick and good for sharing to social/chat. Keep the GIF small Do Effect Keep it 2-6 seconds Much smaller file Reduce dimensions Smaller and faster to load Lower frame rate (10-...