SakeTami
frantone
frantone

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How To Get A YouTube Silver Play Button!! ((Make It Yourself!))

A little project to put on my wall while I wait for the real thing.  Will I actually get the real thing?  Who knows!  But I got this one.  Enjoy! 

https://youtu.be/yYklxTriZao

How To Get A YouTube Silver Play Button!! ((Make It Yourself!))

Comments

You know, I've been thinking about this copyright claim stuff, and it's really unfair that they can claim all monetisation on your video just for one short snippet of a song. It really should be proportional to the total amount of content. After all, you own the copyright for the rest of the video, so you should be able to claim the copyright for the rest of it! Actually, that could be an interesting test. I wonder what would happen if you uploaded a copy of the video with the song removed to a channel on a completely different account, prior to uploading the full video on your normal account. That would allow you to claim the copyright as soon as it hits the ContentID system, or you could even manually submit a claim, then hand over the monetisation to your other channel. I'm just wondering if a video that's had a copyright claim can actually be claimed again. Because if not, this would basically stop others being able to claim your videos, and you'd still get the adsense revenue for it, just through a separate channel.

UpLateGeek

Really neat! :D

Jessica McIntosh

FranLab logo shirt. 🀩

Nicely done. I am looking forward to the T Shirt.

Kendra Akin

Nice Job Fran but oh oh oh.. How come you never looked to the automotive industry for a proper chrome paint. Have a look at this stuff. You can either brush it on or spray it if you have the equipment. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBtdU10PIcE

veritanuda

Nice Fran… very nice indeed. I think your plaque is cooler than YouTube’s. Will you do the T-shirt as a two-colour print?

Howard Simons

I've done a manual filament switch for things like this, but it would only work here if the "Fran" and "Lab" were each thin enough to be printed separately in sequence. In Cura I can stack parts one atop another, then print them in "one at a time" mode. I have to be careful to have a perfect first layer in the transition (neither elephant foot nor "air printing"). I do initial passes with 3-4 layers each, and when that's right, then go for the full thickness. This is also where a taller nozzle can be useful, but be sure to do temperature and speed towers first to allow for temperature drops to the tip. Lower fan speed also helps, though not zero fan (15-20% seems good).

BobC

Seem to remember someone else did one? Ave, This Old Tony,...?

Love it!


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