There were some small mistakes so I'm fixing the video and re-uploading it.
@jestermgee4 жыл бұрын
This is an awesome video. Straight to the facts, easy to follow, nothing not useful. Great job.
@SerialWombat4 жыл бұрын
This tutorial was fantastic. I wanted to build a Fritzing breadboard part for a USB adapter for an ESP8266 ESP-01 board, and was able to get it done in about 2 hours going step by step with your tutorial. Looking forward to watching the rest of the episodes. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
@SidneyCritic4 жыл бұрын
The last ep is about checking the part so the PCB doesn't get manufactured wrong. A quick physical check is print out the PCB and see if the part fits exactly on the print. A deeper part format check is post it on the forum and get the experts to check it - they are better than me -. Just export the fzpz and upload it to the forum with the 7th button in the postbox toolbar. forum.fritzing.org
@colorizedenhanced-timeless92954 жыл бұрын
Good evening, SidneyCritic ComedyHound. pretty informative video. thank. :)
@SilverNemesis4 жыл бұрын
Perfect video, thanks.
@daniellachance87783 жыл бұрын
Good day, sir. I have little experience in Inkscape and Fritzing. Please, don't take it personally, but after only one minute down your video, my head started spinning. At the 2 minutes mark, I had to take a pause, reviewing back and forth the last 2 minutes, for the following 8 - 10 minutes. You have a way to explain things as if your audience had a Ph-D in computing and an engineering degree on these softwares. Gees !! Take time to breathe between sentences, my friend .. and pause every 3 to 5 seconds. I appreciate you know these softwares if depth and you feel it might be a waste of time to make a long tutorial and you feel you can zip it in only 10 minute video, 8 if you stoped explaining to us, while you race through the process, but was there a point to make it that short or to race through your explanations ? .. At all ? This is not a race, y'know. It's ment to be a tutorial (at least, I think so). KZbin won't charge you more if you make an hour long video in order to explain more in detail .. and s l o w e r, so your audience could grasp the subject and procedure. Please note that you had, at this time, over 1,340 views and only 22 « Likes ». Coincidence ?? Best regards and have a great day. No hard feelings.
@SidneyCritic3 жыл бұрын
It's a simple fix, just click the little gear at the bottom-right and slow the vid down. I've got an older series from years ago that is slower, but it's not as simple as this new series. There is a problem with long vids, because as soon as someone sees 1hr they rather fumble around for days than watch it. Basically 10min will suck people in so I'm not spending days doing support on the FZ forum answering the same questions. I know how hard it is the learn something new from scratch when you are old, because I'm old. Just to do my DIY EFI I had to learn electronics, Fritzing, Inscape, XML, etc, all from scratch, and because there are no instructions it took years of fumbling around. I literally knew so little I didn't even know what to google, because I didn't know what the apps could do, ie, it's a Catch22. What made me learn a lot of stuff was curiosity, ie, it was interesting so I wanted to know more. Instead of watching TV I just started watching electronics vids - I've got a PC connected to my TV -, and even though I quit everything I still watch them as entertainment. Good Luck
@IGBeTix-Electronique2 жыл бұрын
@@SidneyCritic I had the same problem with this interesting video. The cadence is to high, some informations could be lost. The idea that 1hr vid is too long depends on the quality of the content. 20 minutes seems to be a good compromise. Don't forget that if these vids are useful, people will watch it till the end. For me (i'm french) the 0.75 speed on yt is ok !!