Jun 08 2007

Putting photos or saved pics in a post

Published by Mike Temple at 5:10 pm under Google, Photo, Pictures, Powerpoint

I had not really grasped what this involved but I think delayed intelligence (or not) has finally kicked in.

I was working with a teacher today who used the upload function to host a picture on edublogs - click on browse under the edit box, then upload, after uploading, click “send to editor”

This pops the picture into the page and you can then resize it.

As previously mentioned in another post, I have been using Picasa web albums to host my pictures as I can upload them in bulk - whether I’m going to use them or not.

Adding a photo album slideshow using Picasa web albums (Google)

Anyway - to the point

If you go to your uploaded Google picasa web albums you can view your pictures - and use them easily

Just click your mouse just to the right of the top left hand corner of your picture and it will turn bluish, showing it has been selected.

Now simply copy and paste this into your blog post and resize to fit


Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!)

One Response to “Putting photos or saved pics in a post”

  1.   Tom Eaveson 28 Jun 2007 at 8:50 am

    Morning Mike,

    Firstly massive apologies for posting in this section but I couldn’t for the life of me find any way to contact you directly.

    I work for a company called Springdoo. I’m writing because I stumbled across a review of our service you had done way back in Feb 2006 (http://nlcommunities.com/communities/miketemple123/archive/2006/02/21/58107.aspx).

    Since you wrote the article the Springdoo team has been working on a number of updates to the service. Post acquisition by UK based company CityBlock (http://www.hemscott.com/news/latest-news/item.do?newsId=45163728895205) we’re pleased to announce the new site is just about up and running – check it out at the same address http://www.springdoo.com.

    We have found that a number of our users have been asking their students to use the service to improve their communication techniques which is a use we’d never have guessed. I’d be really pleased to hear your views on the ‘new’ service.

    Kind Regards,

    Tom Eaves

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