cc licensed ( BY NC ) flickr photo shared by Sebastián-Dario
So what am I talking about? Well of course, as you prepare your presentation (or indeed work on other image-related tasks in your professional work) one of the things you are doing is noting where the image comes from and providing a hyperlinked attribution. If, like me, you are backed into a corner for time, then you will most certainly end up at Flickr. (Even if not in a rush I still prefer to use FlickrCC, and think laterally in my search terms! I also love the new things it throws up for me.)
There are a few reasons for this:
1. You can store your own images at Flickr and build your own collections
2. You can 'favourite' other peoples images (something I regularly do as I collect images for my various bits of work)
3. Now you can also install a nice GreaseMonkey script to make the image attribute even easier.
Here's what it's about - read on, only if you are keen for an adventure!
Alan Levine has written a Flickr Attribution Helper – a browser script that embeds easy to copy attribution text to creative commons licensed flickr images. Greasemonkey is an add-on for Firefox browser. Once Greasemonkey is installed, you have the ability to add all sorts of magical things to the functionality of your browser.
To be honest, the only one I have ever added is Alan's Flickr Attribtion Helper - but its insanely useful! See the image above - that red tee-shirt and the attribution were simply copied from the HTML box and pasted here in the blog! Done in one go!
Stephen Ridgeway, from New South Wales Australia, created a video that explains how to use the Flickr CC Attribution helper (thank goodness - a blog post by itself would never do it!). Download and install the Flickr Attribution helper (after you have installed Greasmonkey). Then watch the magic happen every time you go to a Flickr image!
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