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Matt Stephens said:SFIND said:mustangj17 said:I use it to shoot videos that we can quickly share to social media channels. Cheap content. Great interaction rates. Good for improving our impressions.
What can you shoot in six seconds?
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SFIND said:mustangj17 said:I use it to shoot videos that we can quickly share to social media channels. Cheap content. Great interaction rates. Good for improving our impressions.
What can you shoot in six seconds?
JustinLee said:I know this thread is ancient, but I thought I'd share how I use Vine on high school football Fridays, in case someone is interested.
I noticed that most posting in this thread couldn't find the value in Vine, but I love it.
I use it mostly at high school football games, when I'm taking stats on the sidelines. It takes some multi-tasking to do, but it gets retweets and it can find you some new followers.
First of all, yes, for a while Vine was pretty useless. The only way to input video was to take it in real time, and pressing the screen in the app to record what was in front of you. With six seconds to work with, it was almost impossible to get anything significant from, say, a high school football game, unless you could predict the future and knew what was going to happen in the next six seconds.
But that changed dramatically somewhere along the line after an update, as now Vine allows you to import video already on your phone -- video that you have already taken, regardless of length -- and crop it to the six seconds that you want for the Vine.
That also means you can use your phone's zoom capabilities.
Here's one example of a Vine from the sidelines. All of these are done with my iPhone 5:
In this case, they were on the two-yard line so I knew they had a good chance of scoring, so I pulled out my phone and started recording with my phone's regular camera app. I started well before the play and kept it going for a while after the play. Then I went into Vine, cropped it down to the part that I wanted, and posted it. It allows you to post to both Vine and Twitter at the same time, so that's a bit of a time-saver, and all the hashtags or whatever that you want to use carry over. So, with practice, you can get it all cropped and posted before the next play.
Here's what that Vine looked like posted to Twitter:
https://twitter.com/OAJustinLee/status/523304123819884544
Notice that it got some retweets.
And, as mentioned before in this thread, Vine might be limited to just six seconds, but I still use it over Instagram just because it can embed to Twitter like that.
Also, not only can you crop the video in its running time, but since it displays as a square, it allows you to slide that viewing square window across your rectangular video while you're cropping it. I usually have my phone sideways, in case I get off-center or lose the ball for a moment. Then I can just move the square window to follow it. (None of that may make any sense, but whatever.)
Here's another example from the sideline:
Last week, faced with an early deadline, I was confined to the press box. But even then, with my phone's zoom, I was able to get some worthwhile Vines. Here's one:
A lot of it is guesswork as far as knowing what plays to try to take video of, but I'd recommend anyone to try it. I think people like to actually have the sights and the sounds every once in a while to go with the scoring updates, and Twitter and Vine make the whole deal super easy for people to see on phones and on the computer.
It's all very simple, it uploads instantly, and my followers and readers like it.
Just thought I'd share. I definitely recommend anyone to try it -- and not just for high school football, but anything really. It's so simple and quick, it could be a big part of live-tweeting pretty much anything.