I woke up today to the following message concerning three of my blogs:
Howdy <wp.com username>,
You recently requested to have the administration email address on your site changed.
If this is correct, please click on the following link to change it: <blog URL>/wp-admin/adminemail/<hash>/
You can safely ignore and delete this email if you do not want to take this action.
This email has been sent to <my email>
Regards, All at <blog name> <blog URL>
I was fairly sure I had not requested any changes to my admin email in the middle of the night. Could someone have hacked three of my blogs, hosted with three different providers, including one important blog (obviously not this one) protected by several additional security measures?
Furthermore, why was the pending change not shown in the user profile? Unconfirmed email changes should look like this:
Finally, as far as I understand, these emails would be sent to the new admin email address, not the old one, making a hack even more unlikely.
The problem: Some Office 365 subscriptions include a certain number of monthly Skype minutes. You want to use these with your existing Skype account, but you can’t find a way to connect it to your Office 365 account.
The workaround: If your Office 365 subscription can be shared with other Microsoft accounts, you can also share it with your own Skype account.
This is how you share your Office 365 subscription and free Skype minutes with yourself (as of March 2018):
If you go to your Skype account settings, you’ll see an option to “connect a Microsoft account”:
What this actually does (instead of connecting a Microsoft account and Skype account) is to redirect you to account.microsoft.com where you can sign in using your Skype credentials (because, as mentioned, your Skype account is already a Microsoft account). I you’re asked to add a phone number or e-mail, you’ll notice that you can’t use the e-mail address of your existing Microsoft account. Enter a different e-mail instead.
Verify your e-mail, then sign out of your Skype/Microsoft account and log in to your Microsoft account with the Office 365 subscription. Share the entire Office 365 subscription with your Skype/Microsoft account using the e-mail address you provided in the previous step: Sign out, accept the invitation using your Skype/Microsoft account, then activate your free Skype minutes in your new Office account: Just click on “activate” (or waste a lot of time reading outdated information about linking accounts, then come back and click on “activate”): You should now see the subscription in your Skype account settings, too:
Notes:
Instead of signing in and out of your accounts you could stay signed in on two different browsers (or using incognito mode).
If your Office 365 subscription does not allow sharing (or if you’ve already used all invitations), you can obviously not use this method. I don’t know of any alternative methods you could use.
If you’re reading this article in the future… as opposed to reading it in the past… The method I described worked for me in March 2018. Things will look different and work differently at some point in the future.
In the comments below, feel free to rant about Skype and Microsoft, say nice things about me or propose your own solution to the problem. Don’t ask me to fix your issues! Think about it, Microsoft is a large and immensely wealthy company while I’m just some poor blogger. Ask them for support, not me.
The challenge: Loop a short video clip seamlessly so that it appears to go on forever.
Let’s take this drone footage*:
Example drone footage
It’s not terribly interesting or noteworthy but it’s good enough to demonstrate the concept.
If we simply repeat the same video multiple times, there will be a noticeable jump (repeated 4 times below):
Repeated four times
If we reverse the video, the frames will match but the direction of the movement won’t, which makes it look rather goofy (this is what Instagram does with Boomerang):
Reversed
The solution: Blend the video onto itself
I have used DaVinci Resolve for the following steps (a powerful free version is available), but the concept is the same, regardless of the software. I first cut the video down to a shorter clip (which cannot start at the very beginning of the original footage). As far as the length of the clip is concerned, this is up to your artistic vision and experience. If there’s a discernible repeating movement in your video, you can use this for orientation. I picked a one-third rotation of the wind turbine in the upper left corner:
The looping playback control can be very useful during this step:
The resulting clip was just a little over 2 seconds long:
I then copied it to another track and moved both to the right for demonstration purposes:
Next, I lengthened the clip on the upper track by dragging the “in” point to the left:
Note that the upper clip starts earlier in time and contains footage which is not a part of the lower clip.
I then shortened the upper clip by also dragging the “out” point to the left. The end of the upper clip now perfectly matches the beginning of the lower clip (because it is the part of the original video that comes just before it):
So far, this looks like a needlessly complicated way to split a clip (and yes, you could do it on a single video track). Things got more interesting as I moved the entire upper clip to the end of the lower clip:
Obviously, this resulted in a clearly visible jump at the point where the upper clip starts. However, this jump can be made a lot less noticeable by slowly fading the upper clip in:
The video had now been blended onto itself and I had ensured that the frame at the end was a perfect match for the frame at the beginning.
Here’s the result, repeated 10 times:
Short blend (repeated 10 times)
If you know what to look for, you can see the blending happening (particularly in the water). To make it less obvious, I lengthened the upper clip and the blend:
This is the result (again repeated 10 times):
Looped video (repeated 10 times)
This is the basic concept. You can improve the result in DaVinci Resolve by freezing everything except for the parts where movement should be visible (and also by stabilizing and color grading the video):
If you want to learn more about DaVinci Resolve, I recommend reading the extensive user manual or watching some video tutorials (like the ones made by Casey Faris or Ripple Training). Should you have any questions, I recommend posting them in the official DaVinci Resolve forum(and not in the comments below).
* The video was recorded on a DJI Phantom 3 Standard. The ruin of the mill you see on the left is located in the Luxembourgish town of Moersdorf. The drone was launched from the German side of the river.