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View Full Version : Tour Germany On Line In 32 Minutes (Video + Stills)


IntrepidBerkeleyExplorer
2nd of April 2005 (Sat), 11:30
My film “Septemberfest” presents all of Germany’s best known places: Frankfurt’s old town, a Rhine River cruise, Cologne’s Cathedral, the Hamburg red-light district, Berlin (The Wall, and other changes since 1990), lovely Dresden, Nuremberg, the Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial, Munich (glockenspiel, beer hall, and palaces), plus King Ludwig II’s most famous castle.

This is a free, non-commercial, streaming video on the Windows Media Player. No ads and no strings attached. I sell absolutely nothing. However, you need a high speed internet connection such as DSL or cable in order to view the film.

My video site is:

http://intrepidberkeleyexplorer.com/Video.html

The still photo gallery from this trip can be viewed with any modem at:

http://intrepidberkeleyexplorer.com/Page23.html

There are over 30 of my other amateur travel videos on-line covering all seven continents. Visit Italy, England, Antarctica, Bali, China, Russia, Florida, Mayan Pyramids, Greece, American National Parks, or Turkey; see whales, penguins, or polar bears.

The planet is yours, including my Home Page giant galaxy of still pictures at:

http://intrepidberkeleyexplorer.com/

The Intrepid Berkeley Explorer

KenW
2nd of April 2005 (Sat), 19:06
Your Septemberfest video link only links to itself. Your photos are not very clear. Maybe bad resizing?

Ken

IntrepidBerkeleyExplorer
2nd of April 2005 (Sat), 20:10
Ken,

I tested the video link and it works fine, going to my Video Page as intended. So I don't understand the problem you had with that link. Perhaps try it again. The Video Page describes each video in some detail, and links to a separate page from which the films are streamed. I would like to solve this, if possible. If you made it to the Video Page, things should then be easy. If you ended up somewhere else, I cannot guess where that might have been.

The German stills are at the one megapixel level, as taken by my 2002 camcorder, which does double duty. They should look normal and clear for such digital photos, although not up to the standards of dedicated still cameras or newer camcorders. Still, no one else has ever mentioned a lack of clarity in my stills, leaving a second mystery that may be unsolvable.

The Intrepid Berkeley Explorer