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1: Privacy Policy


Privacy Policy


 

Anomaly Studios, LLC Privacy Policy

Effective date: March 14, 2018, updated June 15th 2019

Anomaly Studios, LLC, also doing business as Anomaly Learning and the Coding Academy ("company", "us", "we", or "our") operates the  https://anomalystudios.com, https://learn.anomalystudios.com, https://classes.anomalystudios.com  UnityXD, Coding Academy websites and apps (the "Service").

 

This page informs you of our policies regarding the collection, use, and disclosure of personal data when you use our Service and the choices you have associated with that data.

We use your data to provide and improve the Service. By using the Service, you agree to the collection and use of information in accordance with this policy. Unless otherwise defined in this Privacy Policy, terms used in this Privacy Policy have the same meanings as in our Terms and Conditions, accessible from https://www.anomalystudios.com/terms-of-use-and-conditions

 

As stated in our Terms of Use, our website and Services are offered and available only to you, if you are (a) that You have not been previously suspended or removed from the Website by Anomaly Learning; (b) that You are either (i) at least 13 years of age or (ii) Your parent and/or guardian has consented to Your use of the Website; and (c) that your registration and your use of the Website is in compliance with any and all applicable laws and regulations.

We are obligated to ask for your explicit consent and give explicit terms of what users are giving consent to.

Definitions

Personal Data

Personal Data or Personally Identifiable Information means data about a living individual who can be identified from those data (or from those and other information either in our possession or likely to come into our possession).

Processing

"processing" generally covers actions that can be performed in connection with data such as collection, use, storage and disclosure.

Usage Data

Usage Data is data collected automatically either generated by the use of the Service or from the Service infrastructure itself (for example, the duration of a page visit).

Cookies

Cookies are small pieces of data stored on a User's device. Our website uses cookies to distinguish you from other users of our website. This helps us to provide you with a good experience when you browse our website and also allows us to improve our site. For example, by ensuring that users are finding what they are looking for easily.

 

Data Controller

Data Controller means the natural or legal  person who (either alone or jointly or in common with other persons) determines the purposes for which and the manner in which any personal data are, or are to be, processed.

 

For the purpose of this Privacy Policy, we are a Data Controller of your data.

Data Processor (or Service Providers)

Data Processor (or Service Provider) means any natural or legal person (other than an employee of the Data Controller) who processes the data on behalf of the Data Controller.

We may use the services of various Service Providers in order to process your data more effectively.

Data Subject (or User)

Data Subject is any living individual who is using our Service and is the subject of Personal Data.

User

The User is the individual using our Service. The User corresponds to the Data Subject, who is the subject of Personal Data.

 

Information Collection And Use

We collect several different types of information for various purposes to provide and improve our Service to you.

Our collection, use, and disclosure of Student Data are governed by our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use and also by the provision of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and applicable state laws that relate to the collection of Student Data.

Our cookies do not collect Personal Information or Children's Personal Information, and we do not combine the general information collected through these cookies with other Personal Information or Children's Personal Information to tell us who you are or what your user name or email address is.

If you come to our business through a sales affiliate, cookies are used to associate your account and information with the sales affiliate in order to calculate sales commissions.

Types of Data Collected

Personal Data

While using our Service, we may ask you to provide us with certain personally identifiable information that can be used to contact or identify you ("Personal Data"). We only ask for Personally Identifiable Information where it is reasonably necessary to provide the Services. Personally identifiable information may include, but is not limited to:

●      Email address

●      First name and last name

●      Phone number

●      Address, State, Province, ZIP/Postal code, City

●      Credit Card Payment Information

●      Your Birthdate and Place of Birth

●      Workplace of School

●      A Photo

●      IP Address

●      Metadata

●      Education Records

●      Cookies and Usage Data

●      Posts on Social Media and more

 

We may use your Personal Data to contact you with newsletters, marketing or promotional materials and other information that may be of interest to you. You may opt out of receiving any, or all, of these communications from us by following the unsubscribe link or instructions provided in any email we send or by contacting us.

Usage Data

We may also collect information how the Service is accessed and used ("Usage Data"). This Usage Data may include information such as your computer's Internet Protocol address (e.g. IP address), browser type, browser version, the pages of our Service that you visit, the time and date of your visit, the time spent on those pages, unique device identifiers and other diagnostic data.

Location Data

We may use and store information about your location if you give us permission to do so ("Location Data"). We use this data to provide features of our Service, to improve and customize our Service.

 

You can enable or disable location services when you use our Service at any time, through your device settings.

Tracking & Cookies Data

We use cookies and similar tracking technologies to track the activity on our Service and hold certain information.We may gather anonymous information about Users through cookie technology on an individual and aggregate level.

 

Cookies are files with small amount of data which may include an anonymous unique identifier. Cookies are sent to your browser from a website and stored on your device. Tracking technologies also used are beacons, tags, and scripts to collect and track information and to improve and analyze our Service.

 

Examples of Cookies we use:

●      Session Cookies. We use Session Cookies to operate our Service.  which expire after a short time or when you close your browser, and persistent cookies, which remain stored in your browser for a set period of time. We use session cookies to identify you during a single browsing session, like when you log in

●      Preference Cookies. We use Preference Cookies to remember your preferences and various settings.

●      Security Cookies. We use Security Cookies for security purposes.

●      Advertising Cookies. Advertising Cookies are used to serve you with advertisements that may be relevant to you and your interests.

●      Analytics Cookies. enable us to monitor and analyze web traffic and can be used to keep track of user behavior.

●      Social Media Cookies. We use Social Media Cookies for various Social Media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Youtube, Linkedin, and Instagram to allow interactions with their services.

●      Email marketing. We collect name and email address when you register for a webinar or event, request a free resource or join a waiting list, via Infusionsoft

 

Non-Personal Information
Web Beacons, also known as pixel tags and clear GIFs, ("Web Beacons"), are electronic images that allow a website to access cookies and help track marketing campaigns and general usage patterns of visitors to those websites. Web Beacons can recognize certain types of information, such as cookie numbers, time and date of a page view, and a description of the page where the Web Beacons are placed. No Personally Identifiable Information about you is shared with third parties through the use of Web Beacons on our website. However, through Web Beacons, we may collect general information that will not personally identify you, such as: Internet browser, operating system, date of visit, time of visit and path taken through the website.

When we collect usage information (such as the numbers and frequency of visitors to the Website), we only use this data in aggregate form, and not in a manner that would identify you personally.  For example, this aggregate data tells us how often users use parts of the Services, so that we can make the Services appealing to as many users as possible.  We may also provide this aggregate information to our partners; our partners may use such information to understand how often and in what ways people use our Services, so that they, too, can provide you with an optimal experience. We do not disclose aggregate information to a partner in a manner that would identify you personally.

 

We use tracking and cookies data for the following purposes:

●      Authentication and security. Cookies help authenticate your access to Anomaly Learning and prevent unauthorized parties from accessing your accounts.

●      Preferences. Cookies help us remember your settings on the pages you visit, so that we can display your preferred content the next time you visit, or preferred language or the country you're in, so we can provide content in your preferred language without asking each time you visit.

●      Analytics and research. Cookies help us test different versions of Anomaly Learning to see which features or content users prefer, web beacons help us determine which email messages are opened, and cookies help us see how you interact with Anomaly Learning, like the links you click on. We also work with a number of analytics partners, including Google Analytics, who use cookies and similar technologies to help us analyze how users use the Services.

●      Personalized content. Cookies help us provide more relevant content.

●      Advertising. To provide you with more relevant advertising. Note that advertising and targeting only happens through our marketing web pages. No marketing or advertising occurs within our platforms when you are logged into your account. We do this so that only advertising appears to parents and not to children. It is our practice and policy to never display advertising to children. 

●      Improve Services. Cookies help us analyze user's experience with our services so that we may improve.

 

 

Information We Collect Automatically

Some information is collected automatically by servers and the services that run the Internet. Additional Metadata is collected for data logs and for security to ensure our platform is a safe place for all. Automatic information collection is described below.

●      Device Information: including your IP address, browser types, browser language, operating system, platform type, gaming platform, device types, and device IDs such as unique identifiers, advertising identifiers, or gaming platform identifiers.

●      Usage Information: including files you download, domain names, landing pages, your browsing activity, what you click, scrolling and keystroke activity, pages viewed, advertising viewed or visited, forms or fields you complete or partially complete, search terms, whether you open an email and your interaction with the content, access times, and error logs, and other similar information.

●      Location Information: including the city, state and ZIP code associated with your IP address, information derived through WiFi triangulation, and precise location information from GPS-based functionality on your mobile devices or from your use of our Mobile Apps, and with your consent, your precise GPS information. (If you are using one of our native apps, and only if you explicitly turned GPS service on within the app, the precise location information from GPS-based functionality will be shared on from your mobile devices or from your use of our Mobile Apps. Your explicit consent is required within our apps for, your precise GPS information to be shared to our systems.)

●      Viewing Behavior: including the content you view, how long you watch each video, the quality of the service you receive (e.g. buffering, load times).

●      Offline Information.  Certain information may also be stored while you are offline and transmitted to us when you next connect to the Internet, regardless of where you connect from or the device you use to connect.

 

 

Google Analytics

We use a tool called "Google Analytics" to collect information about the users of our services. Google Analytics collects information such as how often users visit our website site, what pages they visit when they do so, and what other sites they used prior to coming to our website. We use the information we get from Google Analytics to analyze performance so we can improve our services, including to help customize our website for users.

How to provide or withdraw consent to the installation of Cookies

Most browsers are initially set up to accept cookies, but you can reset your browser to refuse all cookies or to indicate when a cookie is being sent. However, some features and services (particularly those that require you to sign-in) may not function properly if your cookies are disabled. You may also set your email options to prevent the automatic downloading of images that may contain technologies that would allow us to know whether you have accessed our email and perform certain functions with it.

 

Through browser preferences, it is also possible to delete Cookies installed in the past, including the Cookies that may have saved the initial consent for the installation of Cookies by our website.

Users can, for example, find information about how to manage Cookies in the most commonly used browsers at the following addresses: Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari and Microsoft Internet Explorer.

 

With regard to Cookies installed by third parties, Users can manage their preferences and withdrawal of their consent by clicking the related opt-out link (if provided), by using the means provided in the third party's privacy policy, or by contacting the third party.

 

Notwithstanding the above, the Owner informs that Users may follow the instructions provided on the subsequently linked initiatives by the EDAA (EU), the Network Advertising Initiative (US) and the Digital Advertising Alliance (US), DAAC (Canada), DDAI (Japan) or other similar services. Such initiatives allow Users to select their tracking preferences for most of the advertising tools.

Use of Data

Anomaly Studios, LLC uses the collected data for various purposes:

●      To provide and maintain our Service

●      To notify you about changes to our Service

●      To allow you to participate in interactive features of our Service when you choose to do so

●      To provide customer support

●      To gather analysis or valuable information so that we can improve our Service

●      To monitor the usage of our Service

●      To detect, prevent and address technical issues

●      To provide you with news, special offers and general information about other goods, services and events which we offer that are similar to those that you have already purchased or enquired about unless you have opted not to receive such information

●      To comply with applicable laws, regulations, court orders, government and law enforcement agencies' requests.

 

Legal Basis for Processing Personal Data under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)

If you are from the European Economic Area (EEA), our legal basis for collecting and using the personal information described in this Privacy Policy depends on the Personal Data we collect and the specific context in which we collect it.
We may process your Personal Data because:
●       We need to perform a contract with you
●       You have given us permission to do so
●       The processing is in our legitimate interests and it is not overridden by your rights
●       For payment processing purposes
●       To comply with the law

Retention of Data

Anomaly Studios, LLC will retain your Personal Data only for as long as is necessary for the purposes set out in this Privacy Policy and that the data is required to offer our services. We will retain and use your Personal Data to the extent necessary to comply with our legal obligations (for example, if we are required to retain your data to comply with applicable laws), resolve disputes, perform our services, and enforce our legal agreements and policies.

 

Anomaly Studios, LLC will also retain Usage Data for internal analysis purposes. Usage Data is generally retained for a shorter period of time, except when this data is used to strengthen the security or to improve the functionality of our Service, or we are legally obligated to retain this data for longer time periods.

 

You may exercise your right to request your personal information to be deleted by Anomaly Studios, LLC.

We will hold on to personal information only as long as is reasonably necessary for the purpose for which it was collected. We will securely dispose of it once you no longer have a legitimate reason for retaining it.l

 

Transfer Of Data

Your information, including Personal Data, may be transferred to - and maintained on - computers located outside of your state, province, country or other governmental jurisdiction where the data protection laws may differ than those from your jurisdiction.

If you are located outside the United States and choose to provide information to us, please note that we transfer the data, including Personal Data, to United States and process it there.

Your consent to this Privacy Policy followed by your submission of such information represents your agreement to that transfer.

 

Anomaly Studios, LLC will take all steps reasonably necessary to ensure that your data is treated securely and in accordance with this Privacy Policy and no transfer of your Personal Data will take place to an organization or a country unless there are adequate controls in place including the security of your data and other personal information.

 

Transfer of personal information to countries outside the EU/EES

If you choose to use our Services from the European Union, please note the following information:

 

Anomaly Studios, LLC is based in the United States of America. Your personal information is therefore transferred outside the European Union ("EU") and European Economic Area ("EEA"). Such transfer is necessary for the performance of the contract between you Anomaly Studios, LLC

 

Your PII is also transferred to and processed by third party payment providers and your bank. Such transfers are necessary for performance of the contract between you and Anomaly Studios, LLC(article 49.1 (b) of the GDPR).

 

In order for us to provide the Services to you, your personal information will be transferred to, and stored at/processed in the United States. Your personal data may also be processed by staff operating outside the European Economic Area (EEA), such as in India and the Philippines, who work for us or for one of our suppliers. We will take all steps reasonably necessary to ensure that your personal data is treated securely and in accordance with this notice.

Your Data Protection Rights under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)

If you are a resident of the European Economic Area (EEA), you have certain data protection rights. Anomaly Studios, LLC  aims to take reasonable steps to allow you to correct, amend, delete or limit the use of your Personal Data.

If you wish to be informed about what Personal Data we hold about you and if you want it to be removed from our systems, please contact us.

In certain circumstances, you have the following data protection rights:

●       The right to refuse to become a data subject
The right to be informed with anything that happens with your personal data and to know what it is used for

●       The right to refuse processing

●       Unless other contractual issues exist or if proprietary company rights exist (of which you should be informed of before you allow your data to be processed) then you can request a copy of your data.

●       The right to erasure

●       The right to access, update or delete the information we have on you. Whenever made possible, you can access, update or request deletion of your Personal Data directly within your account settings section. If you are unable to perform these actions yourself, please contact us to assist you.

●       The right of rectification. You have the right to have your information rectified if that information is inaccurate or incomplete.

●       The right to object. You have the right to object to our processing of your Personal Data.

●       The right of restriction. You have the right to request that we restrict the processing of your personal information.

●       The right to data portability. You have the right to be provided with a copy of the information we have on you in a structured, machine-readable and commonly used format.

●       The right to withdraw consent. You also have the right to withdraw your consent at any time where we relied on your consent to process your personal information.

Please note that we may ask you to verify your identity before responding to such requests.

You have the right to complain to a Data Protection Authority about our collection and use of your Personal Data. For more information, please contact your local data protection authority in the European Economic Area (EEA).

 

 

Disclosure Of Data

Who we Share your Data with

 

There are some kinds of information you should never provide without student permission including student names, numbers, citizenship, gender, ethnicity, religious and other preferences, grades, GPAs, and class schedules or any other identifiable information.

We may use data which has been de-identified and/or aggregated for product development, research, analytics and other purposes, including for the purpose of analyzing, improving, or marketing the Anomaly Studios, LLC Services. In certain occasions, Anomaly Studios, LLC may share this data with business partners to improve our services or offerings. If we disclose information to authorized business partners to conduct research on online education or assist in understanding the usage, viewing, and demographic patterns for certain programs, content, services, promotions, and/or functionality on our Service, such data will be aggregated and/or anonymized to reasonably avoid identification of a specific individual.

Business Transaction

If Anomaly Studios, LLC is involved in a merger, acquisition or asset sale, your Personal Data may be transferred. We will provide notice before your Personal Data is transferred and becomes subject to a different Privacy Policy.

Disclosure for Law Enforcement

Under certain circumstances, Anomaly Studios, LLC may be required to disclose your Personal Data if required to do so by law or in response to valid requests by public authorities (e.g. a court or a government agency).

Legal Requirements

Anomaly Studios, LLC may disclose your Personal Data in the good faith belief that such action is necessary to:

●      To comply with a legal obligation

●      To protect and defend the rights or property of Anomaly Studios, LLC

●      To prevent or investigate possible wrongdoing in connection with the Service

●      To protect the personal safety of users of the Service or the public

●      To protect against legal liability

 

Security Of Data

The security of your data is important to us, but remember that no method of transmission over the Internet, or method of electronic storage is 100% secure. While we strive to use commercially acceptable means to protect your Personal Data, we cannot guarantee its absolute security.

"Do Not Track" Signals under the California Online Protection Act (CalOPPA)

We do not support Do Not Track ("DNT"). Do Not Track is a preference you can set in your web browser to inform websites that you do not want to be tracked.

 

You can enable or disable Do Not Track by visiting the Preferences or Settings page of your web browser.

Your Rights

Anomaly Studios, LLC aims to take reasonable steps to allow you to correct, amend, delete, or limit the use of your Personal Data.

Whenever made possible, you can update your Personal Data directly within your account settings section. If you are unable to change your Personal Data, please contact us to make the required changes.

 

If you wish to be informed what Personal Data we hold about you and if you want it to be removed from our systems, please contact us.

Schools must annually notify parents of students and eligible students in attendance of their rights under FERPA.

 

In certain circumstances, you have the right:

●      To access and receive a copy of the Personal Data we hold about you

●      To rectify any Personal Data held about you that is inaccurate. If you believe that any PII we are holding is incorrect or incomplete please send an email with your specific request to support@anomalystudios.com

●      You have the right to request your personal information to not be processed

●      You have the right to give consent to disclosures

●      You have the right to file a complaint

●      To request the deletion of Personal Data held about you

 

You have the right to data portability for the information you provide to Anomaly Studios, LLC. You can request to obtain a copy of your Personal Data in a commonly used electronic format so that you can manage and move it.

 

Please note that we may ask you to verify your identity before responding to such requests.

Service Providers

We may employ third party companies and individuals to facilitate our Service ("Service Providers"), to provide the Service on our behalf, to perform Service-related services or to assist us in analyzing how our Service is used.

 

These third parties may have access to your Personal Data only to perform these tasks on our behalf and are obligated not to disclose or use it for any other purpose. Not all providers below will have your data as this is a full representation of 3rd party providers for all our customers servicing a variety of contracts for platforms and services. Only data that is needed for the delivery of the Service is shared with providers to administer the Service.

 

Amazon Web Services

●      Hostgator and Endurance International Group: Their privacy policy can be viewed at: https://www.endurance.com/privacy/privacy

●      Google Apps for Business

●      Google Cloud/Firebase

●      Teachable

●      TeamworkPM

●      TeamworkDesk

●      Infusionsoft

●      Zapier

●      ScheduleOnce

●      OneSignal

●      Copper

●      ClickFunnels

●      ShareThis

●      Inspectlet

●      QuickBooks and QuickBooks Payments

●      Tawk.to Live Support: Their privacy policy can be viewed at: https://www.tawk.to/privacy-policy/

●      Cloudflare: Their privacy policy can be viewed at https://www.cloudflare.com/privacypolicy/

Analytics

We may use third-party Service Providers to monitor and analyze the use of our Service.

●      Google Analytics

●      Google Analytics is a web analytics service offered by Google that tracks and reports website traffic. Google uses the data collected to track and monitor the use of our Service. This data is shared with other Google services. Google may use the collected data to contextualize and personalize the ads of its own advertising network.

●      You can opt-out of having made your activity on the Service available to Google Analytics by installing the Google Analytics opt-out browser add-on. The add-on prevents the Google Analytics JavaScript (ga.js, analytics.js, and dc.js) from sharing information with Google Analytics about visits activity.

●      For more information on the privacy practices of Google, please visit the Google Privacy & Terms web page: http://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/privacy/

Advertising

We may use third-party Service Providers to show advertisements to you to help support and maintain our Service.

●      Google AdSense & DoubleClick Cookie

●      Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on our Service. Google's use of the DoubleClick cookie enables it and its partners to serve ads to our users based on their visit to our Service or other websites on the Internet.

●      You may opt out of the use of the DoubleClick Cookie for interest-based advertising by visiting the Google Ads Settings web page: http://www.google.com/ads/preferences/

Behavioral Remarketing

Anomaly Studios, LLC uses remarketing services to advertise on third party websites to you after you visited our Service. We and our third-party vendors use cookies to inform, optimize and serve ads based on your past visits to our Service.

●      Google AdWords

●      Google AdWords remarketing service is provided by Google Inc.

●      You can opt-out of Google Analytics for Display Advertising and customize the Google Display Network ads by visiting the Google Ads Settings page: http://www.google.com/settings/ads

●      Google also recommends installing the Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on - https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout - for your web browser. Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on provides visitors with the ability to prevent their data from being collected and used by Google Analytics.

●      For more information on the privacy practices of Google, please visit the Google Privacy & Terms web page: http://www.google.com/intl/en/policies/privacy/

●      Twitter

●      Twitter remarketing service is provided by Twitter Inc.

●      You can opt-out from Twitter's interest-based ads by following their instructions: https://support.twitter.com/articles/20170405

●      You can learn more about the privacy practices and policies of Twitter by visiting their Privacy Policy page: https://twitter.com/privacy

●      Facebook and Instagram

●      Facebook remarketing service is provided by Facebook Inc.

●      You can learn more about interest-based advertising from Facebook by visiting this page: https://www.facebook.com/help/164968693837950

●      To opt-out from Facebook's interest-based ads follow these instructions from Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/help/568137493302217

●      Facebook adheres to the Self-Regulatory Principles for Online Behavioral Advertising established by the Digital Advertising Alliance. You can also opt-out from Facebook and other participating companies through the Digital Advertising Alliance in the USA http://www.aboutads.info/choices/, the Digital Advertising Alliance of Canada in Canada http://youradchoices.ca/ or the European Interactive Digital Advertising Alliance in Europe http://www.youronlinechoices.eu/, or opt-out using your mobile device settings.

●      For more information on the privacy practices of Facebook, please visit Facebook's Data Policy: https://www.facebook.com/privacy/explanation

●      Pinterest

●      Pinterest remarketing service is provided by Pinterest Inc.

●      You can opt-out from Pinterest's interest-based ads by enabling the "Do Not Track" functionality of your web browser or by following Pinterest instructions: http://help.pinterest.com/en/articles/personalization-and-data

●      You can learn more about the privacy practices and policies of Pinterest by visiting their Privacy Policy page: https://about.pinterest.com/en/privacy-policy

Payments

We may provide paid products and/or services within the Service. In that case, we use third-party services for payment processing (e.g. payment processors).

 

We will not store or collect your payment card details. That information is provided directly to our third-party payment processors whose use of your personal information is governed by their Privacy Policy. These payment processors adhere to the standards set by PCI-DSS as managed by the PCI Security Standards Council, which is a joint effort of brands like Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover. PCI-DSS requirements help ensure the secure handling of payment information.

 

The payment processors we work with are:

●      Apple Store In-App Payments

â—‹      Their Privacy Policy can be viewed at https://www.apple.com/legal/privacy/en-ww/

●      Google Play In-App Payments

â—‹      Their Privacy Policy can be viewed at https://www.google.com/policies/privacy/

●      Stripe

â—‹      Their Privacy Policy can be viewed at https://stripe.com/us/privacy

●      PayPal or Braintree

â—‹      Their Privacy Policy can be viewed at https://www.paypal.com/webapps/mpp/ua/privacy-full

●      Authorize.net

â—‹      Their Privacy Policy can be viewed at https://www.authorize.net/company/privacy/

●      Infusionsoft by Keap

â—‹      https://keap.com/legal/privacy-policy

â—‹      https://keap.com/legal/data-security

â—‹      https://keap.com/legal/data-protection-faq

●      WePay by Chase

â—‹      https://go.wepay.com/terms-of-service#us

â—‹      https://go.wepay.com/privacy-policy

 

Links To Other Sites

Our Service may contain links to other sites that are not operated by us. If you click on a third party link, you will be directed to that third party's site. We strongly advise you to review the Privacy Policy of every site you visit. We have no control over and assume no responsibility for the content, privacy policies or practices of any third party sites or services.

Children's Privacy

We believe that protecting the privacy of all people is of paramount importance. Protecting the privacy of children is especially important. For that reason we will never collect or maintain information that is not necessary for the delivery of the Service. For account holders of student accounts we only collect a Pseudonym (nick name), username, and password to login to our services. This information is never shared or publicly displayed. Our Service does not address anyone under the age of 13 ("Children") as parents must create and maintain the account.

 

We do not knowingly collect personally identifiable information from anyone under the age of 13. If you are a parent or guardian and you are aware that your Children has provided us with Personal Data, please contact us. If we become aware that we have collected Personal Data from children without verification of parental consent, we take steps to remove that information from our servers.

We are proud supporters of the Student Privacy Pledge. Our collection and use of Student Records is governed by our contracts with the Schools, by our Privacy Policy, and by applicable privacy laws. For example, we work with Schools to help protect personal information from the Student's educational record, as required by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act ("FERPA"), and to protect the personal information of students under 13 consistent with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act ("COPPA"). If you have any questions about reviewing, modifying, or deleting the personal information of a School User accessing the Service through a School partner agreement, please contact your School directly.

When our Service is  used by a School in an educational setting, we may rely on the School to provide the requisite consent from the child's parents for Anomaly Studios, LLC to collect information from a School User under the age of 13. Look at our Terms of service to see more details on consent for children to use our services

Teachers can create accounts on behalf of Students. When registering an account for a Student who is under the age of 13 (a "Child"), the Teacher represents and warrants that they or the educational organization they work for has proper permission to register the Child to use our services.

Information Your Child Can Share

By registering and creating an account for your child, your child will not be able to share information, including photos, videos, audio, and location, publicly and with others. If your child shares information publicly, it would have to be outside of our system and it is strongly advised to not do so as it may be indexable by search engines like Google Search. We are not responsible for the content uploaded by any user.

 

Anomaly Studios, LLC will not serve personalized ads to your child, which means ads will not be based on information from your child's account. Instead, ads may be served to a parent or teacher if they have visited our website for marketing purposes. Your child will never be served  ads served by other (non-Google) ad providers, including ads personalized by third parties because we never advertise to children.

 

 

Changes To This Privacy Policy

We may update our Privacy Policy from time to time. We will notify you of any changes by posting the new Privacy Policy on this page.

 

We will let you know via email and/or a prominent notice on our Service, prior to the change becoming effective and update the "effective date" at the top of this Privacy Policy.

 

You are advised to review this Privacy Policy periodically for any changes. Changes to this Privacy Policy are effective when they are posted on this page.

Contact Us

If you have any questions about this Privacy Policy, please contact us:

●      By email: support@anomalystudios.com

●      By visiting this page on our website: http://www.anomalystudios.com/privacy-policy

●      By mail: Anomaly Studios, LLC. P.O. Box 682592. Franklin, TN 37064

 

 

 

 


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2: Terms of Use and Conditions


Terms of Use and Conditions


 


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3: Header Images Component Tutorial


Header Images Component Tutorial


In the video above you can use the chapters menu to jump to main chapters of the video or use the time code references below to manually jump to parts of the video. The video also has searchable transcripts in the video player. These features are shown below.

 

If you are looking for a quick tech demo of how to integrate the Header Image Component simply start at 1:18 in the video demo above and you will get a full breakdown of the essentials in less than two minutes. 

Then continue on for the remainder of the demo to get a variety of creative design strategy tips and techniques to help provide a world-class visual experience for your site.

 


The header image component provides a versatile and visually impactful way to set the tone and context for web page content. This demo will show you how header images can be used in either a fixed width or full browser width layout, allowing for creative flexibility in design.

The technical steps for using the Header Image Component are very simple and straight forward. As such, the primary focus of this demo is to show a variety of creative strategies of you can use image styles to set the tone and mood of your user experience. If you are looking for the technical steps you can jump straight to 23:10 in the video above. You will see the steps completed in just a few clicks. 

This demo covers various creative strategies like using blurred images, color saturation, and logo overlays to establish the desired mood and branding. The process for implementing header images was shown to be straightforward, leveraging Photoshop templates to easily size and export assets. The demo emphasizes the importance of coordinating header imagery with body content to create a cohesive user experience. The demo highlights the power of the header image component to elevate the visual design of a website through a simple yet effective implementation.

Summary

  • Header Image Component Overview [0:01]

    • Josh Lomelino introduces the header image component, emphasizing its optional nature but noting its importance for design aesthetics and consistency.

    • The header image can be used for various purposes, such as Success Path diagrams, and is flexible across different form factors (mobile, tablet, desktop).

    • The header image can occupy either a fixed size or full screen width, adapting dynamically to the device's size.

    • Josh demonstrates how the header image component adjusts its size and position on different devices, including mobile and desktop.

  • Fixed vs. Full Width Header Images [3:21]

    • Josh explains the two primary ways to use the header image component: fixed width and full width.

    • A fixed width image is useful for Success Path diagrams, showing the user's progress through content.

    • The full width image spans the entire browser width, providing a dynamic and adaptive look.

    • Josh shows examples of both fixed and full width images, highlighting their respective uses and benefits.

  • Creative Strategies for Header Images [6:58]

    • Josh discusses various creative strategies for using header images, including blurred images, color saturation, and logo overlays.

    • Blurred images can set the tone and texture of the page, while color saturation can enhance the mood of different sections.

    • Logo overlays can be used to show product or company logos, or sub-brands within an organization.

    • Photographic images, including cropped photography, can create visual interest and set the stage for the content.

  • Implementation and Exporting Images [10:59]

    • Josh provides a step-by-step guide on implementing header images, including the best image sizes for full width and fixed width images.

    • For full width images, the recommended size is 2300 pixels wide by 240 pixels tall.

    • For fixed width images, the recommended size is around 1448 by 308 pixels.

    • Josh demonstrates how to export images from Photoshop, ensuring they are the correct size and quality for the header component.

  • Using Templates and Media Manager [22:49]

    • Josh explains the use of templates for header images, including full width and fixed width templates.

    • The templates are structured to allow easy drag and drop of images, with layers for different elements like logos and header images.

    • Josh shows how to use the media manager to upload and manage images, emphasizing the importance of consistent file organization.

    • He also discusses the flexibility of using open-source image editing software like GIMP and Procreate.

  • Coordinating Header and Body Images [36:04]

    • Josh demonstrates how to coordinate header images with body images to create a unified look and feel.

    • He explains the process of exporting and uploading images, ensuring they are the correct size and quality.

    • Josh highlights the importance of file naming conventions to avoid issues with server caching.

    • He shows how to update and replace images in the media manager, ensuring the new images are correctly integrated into the page.

  • Creative Freedom and Customization [36:20]

    • Josh encourages users to explore different creative strategies for header images, including using stock imagery from sites like Unsplash.

    • He emphasizes the importance of having a clear license for any content used.

    • Josh demonstrates how to use different effects and adjustment layers in Photoshop to enhance the look of header images.

    • He shows how to create a visual content brainstorm spreadsheet to plan and organize images for different pages or classes.

  • Handling Image Caching and Updates [45:00]

    • Josh explains how to handle issues with image caching, including clearing browser cache or renaming files to force updates.

    • He demonstrates the process of updating and replacing images in the media manager, ensuring the new images are correctly integrated.

    • Josh highlights the importance of testing and refreshing the page to ensure the new images are visible.

    • He provides tips for managing and organizing images in the media manager to maintain consistency and efficiency.

  • Final Thoughts and Best Practices [49:17]

    • Josh summarizes the key points of the tutorial, emphasizing the flexibility and creative freedom of the header image component.

    • He encourages users to explore the examples and templates provided, using them as inspiration for their own designs.

    • Josh highlights the importance of consistent file organization and proper image sizing for optimal performance.

    • He concludes with a reminder to always test and refresh the page to ensure new images are correctly displayed.


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4: Going Deeper - How to Build out the Curriculum Plan


Going deeper


Summary

  • Building the Curriculum Framework 0:02

    • Josh Lomelino discusses the progress made on the initial curriculum framework and the transition to building out additional details.

    • Emphasis on focusing on actions and outcomes, particularly in Unit 2, which involves improving health markers.

    • Josh outlines the milestones and action steps, including setting up a health dashboard and creating a vision plan for health markers.

    • The importance of aligning action steps with outcomes and ensuring they are written in outcomes form.

  • Defining Action Steps and Milestones 1:03

    • Josh details the three milestones and associated action steps for improving health markers.

    • The action steps include getting medical labs, setting up a health dashboard, and creating a vision plan.

    • Josh emphasizes the need to reuse and adapt these action steps for other parts of the curriculum.

    • The growth arc for students involves becoming aware of their health markers, visualizing their current state, and planning for improvement.

  • Mapping Action Steps to Outcomes 5:12

    • Josh explains the process of mapping action steps to outcomes and ensuring they align with the journey arc.

    • The final matrix is used to record and validate the teaching plan, ensuring it helps students achieve their goals.

    • Josh copies and pastes action steps as a starting point, emphasizing the importance of alternating colors for clarity.

    • The matrix helps in structuring and organizing the curriculum, making it easier to see the progress and alignment with outcomes.

  • Developing Assessments and Teaching Topics 6:52

    • Josh introduces the concept of assessments and their role in the curriculum, using a lecture-demo-apply model.

    • The importance of aligning assessments with outcomes and ensuring they contribute to higher levels of learning.

    • Josh discusses the process of breaking down assessments into smaller tasks and ensuring they are correlated with outcomes.

    • The need for a structured approach to course mapping, moving from lower to higher levels of Bloom's Taxonomy.

  • Creating a Structured Curriculum Plan 14:33

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of having a clear plan for each unit, including teaching topics and assessments.

    • The lecture-demo-apply model is used to structure the curriculum, with lectures focusing on conceptual understanding and demos on application.

    • Josh outlines the process of creating a demo for setting up a health dashboard and a vision plan.

    • The importance of having a placeholder for tools and resources that will be developed later in the process.

  • Iterative Development and Refinement 21:24

    • Josh describes the iterative process of developing the curriculum, including taking walks to brainstorm ideas.

    • The use of AI to query and organize thoughts, creating structured outlines and assignment sheets.

    • The importance of having a clear labeling system for organizing curriculum content.

    • Josh emphasizes the need to wait until the plan is solid before creating content to ensure it aligns with the success path.

  • Finalizing the Curriculum Plan 33:57

    • Josh discusses the final steps in the curriculum development process, including copying and pasting items into project management software.

    • The importance of having a clear plan for each unit, with each topic mapped to an outcome.

    • Josh emphasizes the need for a final check to ensure there are no dangling topics or content that does not align with outcomes.

    • The focus on success and ensuring that the curriculum helps students move towards their goals.

 

Here are some strategies to make the curriculum development process more iterative and adaptable:

Here are some strategies to make the curriculum development process more iterative and adaptable:

  1. Use a flexible framework like the curriculum matrix. This allows you to easily rearrange and update content, outcomes, and assessments as you refine the plan.
  2. Incorporate regular brainstorming and ideation sessions, like the walks you described. This helps generate new ideas and adapt the plan based on your evolving thoughts.
  3. Leverage AI and automation tools to quickly organize and structure your ideas. This makes it easier to iterate on the content and assessments.
  4. Build in frequent check-ins and reviews to validate the curriculum plan aligns with the desired outcomes and success path. This enables you to make adjustments early on.
  5. Maintain a clear labeling and organization system, as you mentioned with the topic numbering. This makes it simpler to track changes and see how different elements fit together.
  6. Avoid getting too attached to specific content or assessments early on. Keep an open mindset to revise and refine based on what works best for student success.
  7. The key is balancing structure and flexibility - using the matrix as a guiding framework while leaving room for iterative improvements throughout the development process. This iterative approach helps ensure the final curriculum effectively supports learners in achieving their goals.

 


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5: Coding Academy Welcome


Welcome to the Coding Academy!


 


Unit 1 table of Contents

  1. Welcome
  2. Getting Started
  3. Write your First Program
  4. Refining Part 1
  5. Refining Part 2
  6. Start your Character
  7. Graphics Basics
  8. Create Digital Drawings
  9. Setup a Grid Part 1
  10. Add Color Values
  11. Create your Plan
  12. Programming Overview
  13. Character Dev Part 1
  14. Character Dev Part 2
  15. Character Dev Part 3
  16. Character Dev Part 4

 


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6: Automated Video Production Pipeline


Automated Video Production Pipeline


Description

This video guides you through setting up an automated video production pipeline, from selecting and testing brand voices using Eleven Labs to pairing them with digital avatars in HeyGen. By following the steps, you'll learn how to catalog and integrate voices, match them with visual characters, and generate preview videos for evaluation. Once you complete the video, you'll be able to efficiently create, test, and organize multiple spokesperson options for your brand's automated content generation. This process empowers you to streamline video production and build a scalable library of branded video assets.

 


Outcomes

Following are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  • Identify suitable brand voices using generative AI tools.

  • Catalog and organize voice and avatar options for efficient selection.

  • Integrate third-party voices into video production platforms.

  • Pair voices with digital avatars to create compelling spokesperson combinations.

  • Generate and preview automated video content for evaluation.

  • Document and track production assets for streamlined workflow.

  • Select and finalize top spokesperson options for automated content generation.

 


Summary

  • Introduction to Automated Video Production Pipeline (00:00:00 – 00:00:59)
    Josh kicks off the demo by outlining the goal: selecting brand-aligned voices and digital doubles (either your own clone or hired actors), organizing those assets, and laying out the end-to-end steps needed to spin up a fully automated video production pipeline.

  • Content Sequencing Concept and Cloning (00:00:59 – 00:02:20)
    He explains the core idea of building a repeatable sequence of content—cloning a finished production over and over—so you can continually generate new videos by plugging different scripts into the same automated workflow.

  • Defining Digital Doubles and Voice Types (00:02:20 – 00:03:11)
    Josh clarifies terminology (digital twin vs. digital double), walks through the two main “buckets” of voice assets (personality-based clones vs. spokesperson avatars), and discusses how to mix and match them depending on your brand needs.

  • Selecting Platforms for Generative AI and Deployment (00:03:11 – 00:04:00)
    He emphasizes the importance of vetting your generative-AI tools—voice engines and video avatars—and making sure they’re compatible with your target platforms before committing to any given solution.

  • Brand-Focused Workflow and SRT Utilization (00:04:00 – 00:05:25)
    Josh decides to focus on one streamlined method for this demo, using a single SRT transcript file as the “source of truth” for automation—underscoring that a clean, well-formatted SRT is absolute gold when you’re architecting an automated pipeline.

  • Importing SRT and Leveraging Automation (00:05:25 – 00:07:40)
    He shows how to import the SRT into the voice-generation platform, highlighting how the time-coded script drives every subsequent step—from audio rendering to scene assembly.

  • Setting Up Voice Design in ElevenLabs (00:07:40 – 00:11:49)
    A step-by-step walkthrough of testing voice presets, tweaking text lengths, integrating third-party voices, and crafting voice-design prompts to nail down the exact tone and style you want.

  • Managing Credits and Reviewing Generated Audio (00:11:49 – 00:15:46)
    Josh demonstrates how to monitor and conserve your generation credits, preview the rendered audio, swap out placeholder text, and ensure you’re only spending resources on polished clips.

  • Applying Voiceover and Text Overlays to Video (00:15:46 – 00:19:08)
    He attaches the finalized voice track to the video timeline, adds and styles text overlays (centering, contrast adjustments), and assembles the basic video composition ready for export.

  • Enhancing Prompts with AI Tools for Voice Design (00:19:08 – 00:22:04)
    Introduces additional AI utilities for brainstorming and refining your voice-design prompts—showing how to iterate until you get a sample that truly matches your brand voice.

  • API Key Handling and Asset Export Configuration (00:22:04 – 00:27:28)
    A practical guide on securely copying your ElevenLabs API key, configuring export settings (e.g., 4K output), and organizing all generated files into branded folders for easy access.

  • Frame Rate Considerations and Quality Checks (00:27:28 – 00:31:42)
    Notes the default 25 fps setting, explains how frame rate impacts perceived motion, and walks through checking your export quality to avoid any unexpected artifacts.

  • Avatar Adjustments, Project Naming, and Fallbacks (00:31:42 – 01:05:16)
    Josh covers fine-tuning avatar scale and positioning, updating project names for consistency, and setting up fallback workflows if you need to swap voices or visuals mid-pipeline.

  • Avatar Replacement and Cataloging (00:31:42 – 00:34:06)
    Pair your chosen voice with visuals by replacing the default avatar, browsing through the 21 “looks” in each category, using the snipping tool to capture promising thumbnails, and logging each candidate’s name and category in your tracking spreadsheet.

  • Avatar Testing and Video Formatting (00:34:07 – 00:36:24)
    Brainstorm voice–visual combinations (e.g. “August”), select a portrait-mode avatar, preview the static image, upload any custom avatars into the pipeline, drag your source video beneath the avatar layer, and confirm the composition and framing.

  • Voice-Avatar Sync and Quality Comparison (00:36:24 – 00:37:39)
    Generate audio samples to compare HeyGen vs. ElevenLabs quality, force-refresh the clip to confirm it’s using the intended voice (e.g. Ryan Kirk), and watch for the spinning indicator to verify successful render.

  • Preview Generation and File Labeling (00:38:10 – 00:39:11)
    Render a 4K preview of the voice-avatar pairing, then label the export asset with your convention (e.g. 001_RyanKirk_CharlieAvatar) so each test remains organized and easily identifiable.

  • Pipeline Duplication for Variant Testing (00:39:11 – 00:41:15)
    Duplicate the entire sequence to create “Test 002,” swap in a new avatar (such as Colton), explore lifestyle/UGC categories, and note how background removal and frame size affect the final look.

  • Background Removal and Frame Adjustments (00:41:15 – 00:42:32)
    Apply the background-remover tool to avatars with built-in backgrounds, observe any cut-offs (like arms being cropped), tweak the canvas framing, and decide between static vs. transparent backgrounds based on brand needs.

  • Third-Party Voice Integration Workflow (00:42:32 – 00:44:03)
    In the “My Voices” tab, toggle on integrated voices (e.g. Charlie), heart your favorites so they surface first, preview each sample, and ensure the API integration is active before proceeding.

  • Voice Audition Labeling and Mood Board Documentation (00:44:03 – 00:47:09)
    Name each audition (e.g. 002_CharlieAvatar), update your mood board with snipped thumbnails, record which browser tab or category each came from, and keep this documentation up to date for reproducibility.

  • Frame Rate and Credit Management (00:47:09 – 00:48:06)
    Note the default 25 fps setting—mismatches can cause audio sync issues—toggle off “Avatar 4” if you’re on an unlimited plan, and monitor your generation credits to avoid unexpected limits.

  • Styling and Folder Organization (00:48:06 – 00:49:29)
    Adjust text overlay colors to maintain contrast (match your brand palette), create new folders for each batch, and standardize your output directory structure so you know exactly where each rendered clip lives.

  • Option Preview and Cataloging Workflow (00:49:30 – 00:55:51)
    Refresh thumbnails, scroll through voice-avatar combos, assign option numbers, screenshot grids of candidates, and log each pairing’s status (“Yes,” “Maybe,” “No”) in your spreadsheet.

  • Iteration Process and Consistency Notes (00:55:51 – 00:57:23)
    Always regenerate every variation (never reuse stale renders), note any limitations (e.g. animated text can cover on-screen elements), and keep your naming and documentation consistent so the pipeline remains bullet-proof.

  • Ranking Options and Visual Separators (00:57:24 – 01:02:40)
    Introduce visual separators in your catalog (e.g. blank rows), rank the top voice-avatar combos, screenshot your “definite yes” list, and preserve those as templates for future batches.

  • Additional Voice Integration: Amelia (01:02:40 – 01:04:33)
    Search for “Amelia” in your voice library, verify whether it’s built-in or needs third-party integration, add it to favorites, preview the sample, and record its ID for consistent reuse.

  • Final Voice Candidate Integration (01:04:33 – 01:05:16)
    Confirm Amelia’s render, then search for any last candidates (e.g. “Analore”), heart and test them, catalog the results, and ensure each new voice is fully integrated into the pipeline.

  • Pipeline Finalization and Duplication for Scale (01:05:16 – 01:08:34)
    In closing, he recaps that once you’ve chosen your voices and avatars, you can literally duplicate this entire process—scripts, audio, video, assets—to churn out a full social-media content library on autopilot.
  • Final Pipeline Recap and Scale Duplication (01:07:40 – 01:08:34)
    Recap how you’ve selected your final set of voices and avatars, finalize your naming conventions, and highlight that you can now duplicate this entire automated workflow to churn out an endless library of on-brand social-media videos.

 

 

 

 


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7: Low Code Philosophy


Low Code Philosophy


Description

This video demonstrates AMP's low-to-no-code implementation, which allows users to easily build websites without extensive web development knowledge. Users will learn how to drag and drop content, copy and paste text, and leverage AMP's auto-code generation to create a responsive, multi-device experience - all while saving time and money compared to traditional web development. By the end of the video, users will be equipped with the skills to efficiently deploy their own websites and online experiences using AMP's simplified, frictionless platform.


Outcomes

Here are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

 

  1. Explain the low-to-no-code implementation process for features like memberships, blogs, and e-commerce.

  2. Demonstrate how to drag and drop videos and copy/paste content to create a website.

  3. Describe how the platform auto-generates code on the backend to provide a frictionless, fast, and easy deployment process.

  4. Illustrate how the responsive design works across different device form factors, from phones to desktops.

  5. Summarize how Amp's auto-code generation saves users time and money compared to traditional web development.

  6. Identify the key components and integrations supported by the platform, such as memberships, blogs, funnels, and e-commerce.

  7. Apply the low-to-no-code philosophy to efficiently build and deploy a website without extensive technical knowledge.


Summary

Low Code Implementation Overview 0:00:00

  • AMP provides a low to no code implementation, eliminating the need for extensive web development knowledge

  • Traditional web development involves working with developers and learning HTML, JavaScript, and other dynamic database languages

  • AMP simplifies the process by handling the backend programming, allowing users to drag and drop content and copy and paste text

  • The platform auto-generates code on the fly, creating a frictionless, fast, and cost-effective process for deploying sites

Components and Integrations 0:02:04

  • AMP supports various components such as memberships, blogs, main sites, funnels, sales, and e-commerce integrations

  • Users no longer need to hire development teams for these integrations as AMP handles them through an auto-code structure

  • Josh Lomelino outlines the next steps, including demonstrating how to use these components in a low to no code environment

  • The platform ensures that content works across multiple devices, from phones to desktops, without additional coding

Responsive Experience and Form Factors 0:03:10

  • AMP's responsive experience is designed to work seamlessly across different form factors, including phones, tablets, and desktops

  • The platform supports a mobile-first strategy, ensuring content is accessible on various devices without manual adjustments

  • Users can upload and integrate content without worrying about compatibility issues across different device types

  • The responsive design ensures a consistent user experience regardless of the device the user is accessing the content from

Core Philosophy and Next Steps 0:04:30

  • The low to no code philosophy is central to AMP's approach, simplifying the process for users

  • Josh Lomelino emphasizes that AMP has done the heavy lifting on the backend, making the process easy and efficient

  • The platform aims to save time and money by automating much of the technical work involved in web development

  • Users can expect a smooth transition to the next steps, with detailed instructions on how to use AMP's features effectively


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8: Announcements Component


The announcements component allows you to easily manage and publish important messages and callouts on your website's home page. You can create announcements with images, dates, descriptions, and links to drive traffic to specific pages or files. After watching this demo, you'll be able to efficiently update and modify announcements as needed to keep your members informed about the latest news and information.


Overview

The announcements component allows you to easily manage and publish important messages and callouts on your website's home page. You can create announcements with images, dates, descriptions, and links to drive traffic to specific pages or files. After watching this demo, you'll be able to efficiently update and modify announcements as needed to keep your members informed about the latest news and information.


Outcomes

Here are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  • Manage multiple announcements on the home page of a website

  • Integrate images, dates, descriptions, and links into announcements

  • Drive traffic to specific pages or files using announcement click-through links

  • Update and modify existing announcements as needed

  • Ensure announcements are mobile responsive across devices

  • Leverage announcements to keep members informed about important information

  • Organize announcements in a specific order to prioritize content

  • Utilize the integrated file management system to select announcement images

  • Understand the importance of following template guidelines for image dimensions

  • Efficiently create, submit, and publish new announcements in the CMS


Summary

  • Announcements Component Overview (0:00)

    • Josh Lomelino introduces the announcements component, which allows managing multiple announcements on the home page of a site.

    • Announcements can include images, dates, descriptions, and links to download files or redirect to different areas of the site.

    • The component is designed to help manage important messages and callouts effectively.

    • Josh explains that the announcements will be mobile responsive, working on various devices like mobile, tablet, and desktop.

  • Creating and Managing Announcements (0:38)

    • Josh demonstrates how to create a new announcement in the CMS by clicking "Create Announcement."

    • He inputs a title for the announcement, "Example Announcement," and selects a file from the integrated file management system.

    • Josh highlights the importance of using the provided template for file dimensions to ensure proper formatting.

    • He explains how to edit image dimensions and mentions that the announcements are mobile responsive.

  • Adding Links and Dates to Announcements (2:14)

    • Josh shows how to add a click-through hyperlink to an image, which can redirect users to a specific page.

    • The order of announcements is determined by the order in which they are created, with the most recent announcement appearing first.

    • Users can choose to include a date for the announcement, which will automatically default to the current date if not specified.

    • Josh provides an example of setting a date and text for an announcement and submitting it to the database.

  • Updating and Modifying Announcements (3:36)

    • Josh explains that once an announcement is submitted, it will be displayed on the home page with the specified date and text.

    • He demonstrates how to modify an existing announcement by changing the text and adding a new URL or file.

    • Users can update the announcement to drive traffic to specific pages or download files.

    • Josh emphasizes the flexibility of the announcements component in managing and updating important information on the home page.

  • Driving Traffic and Keeping Members Informed (4:52)

    • Josh discusses the versatility of the announcements component in driving traffic to various parts of the site.

    • He provides examples of how to use announcements to keep members informed about new blog posts or conference speaker lineups.

    • The component allows for the easy management of current and relevant information on the home page.

    • Josh concludes by reiterating the importance of keeping the home page updated with important announcements to keep members engaged and informed.


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9: Related Link Network Component


Related Link Network Component


Description

The video demonstrates how to use the related link network feature in AMP to create powerful connections between content items. Viewers will learn to quickly and easily add related links, both internal and external, to any content page, allowing users to navigate the content in a seamless and flexible manner. The video also highlights advanced features like bi-directional linking and filtered search, empowering users to manage and organize their content knowledge base with minimal effort. By the end of the video, viewers will be able to leverage the related link network to enhance the discoverability and user experience of their content.


Outcomes

  1. Explain the concept of related links and their importance in enhancing learning and knowledge building.

  2. Identify the issue of isolated content in many learning systems and the need for creating meaningful connections between ideas.

  3. Describe the use of a sequence of content as a method to create relationships between content items.

  4. Demonstrate the ability to create a related link network, a user interface that visualizes the connections between content.

  5. Utilize AMP's related link network feature to quickly and easily create complex related link structures with minimal effort.

  6. Apply the flexibility of the related link network to create both sequential and asynchronous content paths.

  7. Implement the process of adding related links, including internal and external resources, to a content page.

  8. Manage and reorganize related links to ensure a clean and easy-to-navigate user interface.

  9. Leverage the advanced features of the related link network, such as bi-directional linking and filtered search, to enhance the organization and discoverability of content.

  10. Modify and update related links, including changing titles and URLs, and observe the real-time updates to the user interface.


Outline

table,blockquote,div[data-lang],h4,h5,h6,hr):not(:first-child)]:mt-2 [&_:is(p,ul,ol,dl,table,blockquote,div[data-lang],h3,h4,h5,h6,hr):not(:last-child)]:mb-2 [&_:is(ul,ol)]:pl-5 [&_ul]:list-disc [&_ol]:list-decimal [&_ol>li>ol]:list-[lower-alpha] [&_ol>li>ol>li>ol]:list-[lower-roman] [&_ol>li>ol>li>ol>li>ol]:list-[list-decimal] [&_[data-user]]:text-primary [&_:is(strong,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6)]:font-semibold [&_:is(h1)]:text-2xl [&_:is(h2)]:text-lg [&_:is(h3)]:text-md [&_h1:not(:first-child)]:mt-8 [&_h1:not(:last-child)]:mb-6 [&_h2:not(:first-child)]:mt-6 [&_h2:not(:last-child)]:mb-4 [&_h3:not(:first-child)]:mt-4 whitespace-pre-wrap break-words" style="--tw-border-spacing-x: 0; --tw-border-spacing-y: 0; --tw-translate-x: 0; --tw-translate-y: 0; --tw-rotate: 0; --tw-skew-x: 0; --tw-skew-y: 0; --tw-scale-x: 1; --tw-scale-y: 1; --tw-scroll-snap-strictness: proximity; --tw-ring-offset-width: 0px; --tw-ring-offset-color: var(--color-surface-default, #FFFFFF); --tw-ring-color: rgb(147 197 253 / 1); --tw-ring-offset-shadow: 0 0 #0000; --tw-ring-shadow: 0 0 #0000; --tw-shadow: 0 0 #0000; --tw-shadow-colored: 0 0 #0000; box-sizing: inherit; border-width: 0px; border-style: solid; border-color: var(--color-border-default, #BEC5D0); white-space: pre-wrap; overflow-wrap: break-word; --font-size: var(--font-size-md, 16px); --line-height: var(--line-height-md, 24px); font-size: var(--font-size); line-height: var(--line-height);">

Related Link Network Overview [0:00:00 - 0:10:09]

  • Introduces the concept of related links and their power in enhancing learning and knowledge building

  • Highlights the issue of isolated content in many learning systems, preventing meaningful connections between ideas

  • Suggests using a sequence of content as one method to create relationships

  • Introduces the idea of a related link network, a user interface that visualizes these connections

Creating a Related Link Network [0:10:09 - 0:14:09]

  • Explains that AMP's related link network is designed to be a low to no-code solution

  • Provides an example of building a demo on SEO best practices, breaking it down into related topics

  • Emphasizes the flexibility of the related link network, allowing for both sequential and asynchronous content paths

Live Demonstration of Related Link Technology [0:14:09 - 0:18:04]

  • Demonstrates the process of adding related links to a test page

  • Shows how to add external resources, such as blog articles or links to other websites

  • Explains how to reorder and manage related links, ensuring a clean and easy-to-navigate user interface

Advanced Features and Filtered Search [0:18:04 - 0:20:00]

  • Introduces bi-directional linking, allowing content to be linked in both directions

  • Demonstrates the filtered search feature, which allows users to quickly find specific content items in large databases

  • Explains how to modify and update related links, including changing titles and URLs, and how these changes are reflected in real-time

  • Reiterates the power and flexibility of the related link network, emphasizing its ability to create seamless connections across different content types and form factors


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10: Overview Bird’s Eye View


Keywords: Content,creation,workflow,time-saving,high-quality,student,outcomes,audio,file,screen,recording,Camtasia,OBS,generative,AI,digital,double,course,matrix,instructional,design,Otter,PowerPoint,slides


Josh Lomelino's ultimate content creation workflow is designed to dramatically reduce course development time from months to weeks or days by leveraging various content generation methods. His approach ranges from simple audio-only techniques to fully automated workflows using generative AI, with a focus on delivering clear, measurable learning outcomes. The workflow encompasses four progressive methods, starting with basic audio creation and advancing to complex AI-driven content generation that can produce digital avatars, slides, and video content from simple text prompts. By providing a flexible, scalable approach, Lomelino enables content creators to efficiently develop high-quality online courses and educational materials.


Description

Josh Lomelino's ultimate content creation workflow is designed to dramatically reduce course development time from months to weeks or days by leveraging various content generation methods. His approach ranges from simple audio-only techniques to fully automated workflows using generative AI, with a focus on delivering clear, measurable learning outcomes. The workflow encompasses four progressive methods, starting with basic audio creation and advancing to complex AI-driven content generation that can produce digital avatars, slides, and video content from simple text prompts. By providing a flexible, scalable approach, Lomelino enables content creators to efficiently develop high-quality online courses and educational materials.

 

Outcomes

After this demo, learners will be able to:

  1. Understand the Four Methods of Content Creation

  • Differentiate between audio-only, screen recording, webcam, and fully automated content generation techniques

  • Recognize the strengths and limitations of each workflow method

  1. Develop Efficient Content Generation Skills

  • Apply AI tools like Otter AI, Claude AI, and ChatGPT for script drafting and refinement

  • Create high-quality educational content using streamlined workflows

  1. Leverage AI Technologies for Course Development

  • Utilize generative AI platforms for audio, video, and slide creation

  • Transform content development timelines from months to weeks

  1. Design Learner-Centered Educational Content

  • Craft clear, measurable learning outcomes

  • Develop instructional materials that focus on practical skills and immediate application

  1. Implement Scalable Content Production Strategies

 

Summary

  • Overview of Content Creation Workflow 0:09

    • Josh Lomelino introduces the ultimate content creation workflow class, aiming to reduce course development time from months to weeks or days.

    • The course will cover a blend of simple to fully automated workflows, starting with simpler methods for quick wins and progressing to advanced approaches.

    • Emphasis is placed on delivering clear, measurable outcomes and setting up necessary systems from the start.

    • The course will cover creating basic audio files, screen recording using tools like Camtasia or OBS, and fully automated workflows using generative AI.

  • Methods of Content Creation 1:30

    • Josh Lomelino outlines four methods of content creation, ranging from simple to fully automated, with each method providing a different level of complexity and automation.

    • Method one involves creating audio-only content using tools like Claude AI or ChatGPT to refine scripts and generate final audio files.

    • Method two involves real-time screen recording using software like Camtasia, capturing both screen content and voice simultaneously.

    • Method three combines screen recording with live webcam footage, allowing for a more dynamic on-screen presence.

    • Method four uses AI to generate a digital double video from a recorded vocal track, with AI also generating PowerPoint or Canvas slides.

  • Detailed Explanation of Methods 2:49

    • Method one: Josh explains the process of refining raw text into final audio scripts using AI tools and recording the final audio file manually or with AI.

    • Method two: Josh describes using Camtasia to record both screen and voice simultaneously, minimizing post-production work and suitable for relaxed, adaptable work.

    • Method three: Josh details recording both screen and webcam footage in one take, requiring careful setup for a consistent on-camera presence.

    • Method four: Josh explains using AI to generate a digital double video from a recorded vocal track, with AI also generating slides synchronized to the transcript.

  • Implementation and Integration 10:04

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of starting with method one and progressing sequentially to method four, explaining the workflows and specific tools used to optimize the process.

    • The course is designed to provide strategies that can be implemented immediately, with each method providing a different level of automation and complexity.

    • Josh will demonstrate how to generate scripts, auto-generate audio files, and record both audio and video manually, as well as how to automatically generate PowerPoint and Canvas slides using AI.

    • The final video will show how to integrate these workflows into Anomaly AMP, providing learners with contextual information and a timeline breakdown.

 

  


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11: Method 1a Manual Audio Recording


Keywords: audio,recording,microphone,quality,live,studio,interface,phantom,power,sample,rate,uncompressed,format,pop,filter,level,balancing,Camtasia,Studio,file,organization,voice,clone,AI,avatar,sound,absorption


This video provides a comprehensive guide to professional audio recording for content creators, focusing on essential equipment and techniques for high-quality sound production. Viewers will learn how to select the right microphone, set up a proper recording environment, and use audio interfaces and editing tools to capture clean, professional-grade audio. By following Josh Lomelino's expert advice, participants will be able to create polished audio recordings suitable for workshops, demos, podcasts, and even AI-generated video content. The tutorial equips creators with practical skills to improve their audio recording process and produce more engaging, professional-sounding content.


Description

This video provides a comprehensive guide to professional audio recording for content creators, focusing on essential equipment and techniques for high-quality sound production. Viewers will learn how to select the right microphone, set up a proper recording environment, and use audio interfaces and editing tools to capture clean, professional-grade audio. By following Josh Lomelino's expert advice, participants will be able to create polished audio recordings suitable for workshops, demos, podcasts, and even AI-generated video content. The tutorial equips creators with practical skills to improve their audio recording process and produce more engaging, professional-sounding content.


Outcomes

Here are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  1. Select an appropriate high-quality microphone for professional audio recording

  2. Set up a clean, noise-free recording environment

  3. Configure audio interfaces and software for optimal sound capture

  4. Choose the correct sample rate and recording format

  5. Use a pop filter and mic positioning techniques to improve audio quality

  6. Perform audio test recordings and evaluate sound levels

  7. Utilize audio editing tools for recording and post-production

  8. Implement file organization strategies for audio projects

  9. Export audio files in various formats for different content needs

  10. Create consistent, professional-grade audio recordings for workshops, demos, and presentations

  11. Prepare audio recordings for potential AI avatar or voice clone generation

  12. Troubleshoot common audio recording and equipment setup challenges


 

Summary

  • Basic Method of Production 0:09

    • Josh Lomelino explains the simplicity and power of recording thoughts and ideas using just a microphone.

    • Live recordings during workshops or demos are more engaging but harder to edit if mistakes are made.

    • Studio recordings allow for pauses and polished takes but require maintaining a natural and conversational tone.

    • The importance of a high-quality microphone and a quiet, clean recording space is emphasized.

  • Microphone Setup and Recording Quality 1:31

    • Josh recommends the AKG condenser mic for its clean, detailed sound, which requires phantom power.

    • The Shure 57 microphone is mentioned as a versatile option for various recording situations.

    • The Zoom H6 USB audio interface is preferred for its compatibility with various software like Camtasia.

    • Recording at 48,000 Hz instead of the default 44.1 Hz is suggested to preserve audio detail.

  • Audio Recording Practices 3:18

    • Josh advises recording in an uncompressed format like WAV until the final export to avoid audio degradation.

    • Ensuring the computer and audio interface are set to the same sample rate prevents speed mismatches.

    • The use of a pop filter and an adjustable mic arm helps maintain consistent audio quality.

    • Test recordings and listening on different devices help ensure balanced sound levels.

  • Audio Editing and Tools 4:53

    • Josh mentions various audio editing tools like Audacity, Adobe Audition, Pro Tools, and FL Studio.

    • Camtasia Studio is recommended for its convenience in recording and managing audio projects.

    • The Auto Normalize feature in Camtasia helps maintain consistent volume throughout recordings.

    • Exporting recordings as MP3s allows for generating on-camera videos using AI avatars.

  • File Organization and Studio Setup 5:55

    • A consistent naming system for recordings and exports is crucial for easy retrieval and updates.

    • Avoiding rooms with echo and using soft materials to absorb sound helps improve recording quality.

    • A good studio setup, including soundproofing and proper equipment, is essential for high-quality recordings.

    • Josh hints at a future demo on creating a voice clone, which requires clean and consistent audio recordings.

 


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12: Screen + Audio + Camera


Keywords: Screen,recording,audio,capture,on-camera,presentation,production,challenges,lighting,consistency,studio,lights,color,temperature,LED,panels,backlights,kicker,light,digital,double,4K,webcam,system,performance,green,screen,Camtasia


In this video, Josh Lomelino demonstrates Method Three for creating engaging screen recordings that combine on-camera presence, screen capture, and audio. Viewers will learn how to set up professional lighting using LED panels, choose the right camera equipment, and optimize their recording environment for high-quality video production. The tutorial covers essential techniques for maintaining visual continuity, managing lighting color temperatures, and using tools like Camtasia and green screens to create polished, professional-looking video content. By following Josh's guidance, content creators will be able to produce dynamic, natural-looking screen recordings with improved technical quality and visual appeal.


Description

In this video, Josh Lomelino demonstrates Method Three for creating engaging screen recordings that combine on-camera presence, screen capture, and audio. Viewers will learn how to set up professional lighting using LED panels, choose the right camera equipment, and optimize their recording environment for high-quality video production. The tutorial covers essential techniques for maintaining visual continuity, managing lighting color temperatures, and using tools like Camtasia and green screens to create polished, professional-looking video content. By following Josh's guidance, content creators will be able to produce dynamic, natural-looking screen recordings with improved technical quality and visual appeal.


Outcomes

Here are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  1. Manage on-camera and screen recording simultaneously

  2. Maintain visual continuity during video recordings

  3. Set up professional lighting using LED panels

  4. Adjust color temperature and brightness for optimal video quality

  5. Create a three-point lighting setup with key, fill, and kicker lights

  6. Select and configure appropriate camera equipment for video production

  7. Optimize system performance for screen and camera recording

  8. Use a Wacom tablet for digital whiteboarding

  9. Implement green screen techniques for background removal

  10. Combine multiple video takes into a seamless recording

  11. Export and render high-quality video files

  12. Create digital double avatars for reusable content

  13. Troubleshoot common video production challenges

  14. Select and position lighting equipment safely

  15. Integrate on-camera performance with slides and screen recordings


 

Summary

  • Method Three Demo and Challenges 0:08

    • Josh Lomelino introduces method three, which involves screen recording, audio, and on-camera capture, emphasizing its ability to capture natural, unscripted moments.

    • He highlights the challenges of managing both screen and camera presence simultaneously, including the need to maintain a consistent camera angle and expression.

    • Josh explains the importance of resuming recording with a neutral expression to ensure visual continuity.

    • He mentions the difficulty of pausing and resuming recording without noticeable edits when on camera.

  • Lighting Considerations for On-Camera Work 1:46

    • Josh discusses the significance of lighting in on-camera work, including the need to keep lighting consistent between takes.

    • He recommends using affordable studio lights, such as LED lights, which stay cool and are suitable for longer sessions.

    • Josh explains the concept of color temperature, noting that outdoor light can affect indoor lighting and cause color shifts.

    • He suggests using LED lights that allow adjustments in brightness and color temperature to manage lighting effectively.

  • Setting Up Lighting Equipment 3:02

    • Josh shares his preference for the Spectro Essential 360 LED panels, which range from 3250 to 6000 Kelvins and are dimmable.

    • He describes his typical setup, which includes stacking four LED panels in front and sometimes behind him to create soft, even light.

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of using back lights to create a "kicker light" effect, which helps outline the subject and makes them stand out from the background.

    • He advises adding weight to light stands to prevent them from tipping if bumped.

  • Camera and Recording Equipment 6:07

    • Josh talks about using a full-frame camera like the Canon 5D Mark III for high-quality recordings, but notes that a good 4K webcam can also deliver excellent results.

    • He recommends Logitech webcams, such as the Logitech 1080P cam, for their affordability and performance.

    • Josh explains the benefits of recording screen and camera separately, especially if the system can't handle 4K video and screen capture simultaneously.

    • He mentions the use of digital double avatars for reusing lighting and performance footage.

  • Optimizing System Performance and Audio Settings 8:15

    • Josh advises optimizing the graphics card and operating system for better system performance.

    • He recommends setting the microphone to 48,000 hertz and ensuring phantom power is turned on through the sound interface.

    • Josh suggests using a Wacom tablet for live whiteboarding, either with the Cintiq for direct drawing or a more affordable tablet for drawing on a pad.

    • He emphasizes the importance of setting pen lines thick enough to show clearly in high-resolution recordings.

  • Using Camtasia and Green Screens 9:20

    • Josh highlights Camtasia's ability to combine multiple takes into one smooth recording and overlay on-camera performance videos on PowerPoint slides.

    • He explains the use of green screens for added flexibility, including the need to light the green screen evenly and separately from the face lighting.

    • Josh mentions the built-in removal tool in Camtasia for easily removing the green screen background.

    • He advises fine-tuning the green screen setup to avoid issues with hair and shoulder edges.

  • Exporting and Backing Up Videos 10:17

    • Josh recommends exporting videos as MP4 files using the H.264 format with a rendering quality around 75%.

    • He advises keeping files organized and backed up for potential updates.

    • Josh mentions the use of green screens for recording digital double avatar videos, which can be easily removed from the background later.

    • He concludes the demo by encouraging viewers to invest in high-quality audio and video assets for better results.

 


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13: On Camera Performance Quality


Keywords: Webcam,DSLR,setup,brightness,contrast,color,temperature,LUT,presets,image,quality,white,balancing,Logitech,software,post,production,Camtasia,Premiere,Pro,Lumetri,video,on-camera,performance


In this video, Josh provides a comprehensive guide to improving on-camera video quality using webcam settings and post-production techniques. Viewers will learn how to optimize their camera's brightness, contrast, and color settings through software applications like Logitech's control panel, and understand the importance of proper lighting and white balancing. The tutorial demonstrates how to fine-tune video appearance by adjusting settings, testing variations, and using LUT presets in editing software like Premiere Pro. By following these steps, content creators can produce professional-looking videos with consistent, high-quality visual performance.


Description

In this video, Josh provides a comprehensive guide to improving on-camera video quality using webcam settings and post-production techniques. Viewers will learn how to optimize their camera's brightness, contrast, and color settings through software applications like Logitech's control panel, and understand the importance of proper lighting and white balancing. The tutorial demonstrates how to fine-tune video appearance by adjusting settings, testing variations, and using LUT presets in editing software like Premiere Pro. By following these steps, content creators can produce professional-looking videos with consistent, high-quality visual performance.


Outcomes

Here are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  1. Calibrate webcam settings for optimal image quality

  2. Adjust brightness and contrast using manufacturer-specific software

  3. Perform white balance corrections using neutral objects

  4. Identify and correct color temperature issues

  5. Screenshot and test video settings across multiple devices

  6. Apply LUT presets for consistent color grading

  7. Use post-production tools like Premiere Pro for video enhancement

  8. Create repeatable video quality settings for future productions

  9. Troubleshoot common on-camera video performance problems

  10. Compare and evaluate video quality against professional standards


 

Summary

  • Critical Considerations for On-Camera Video Performances 0:08

    • Josh Lomelino introduces the topic of critical considerations for on-camera video performances and video quality.

    • He emphasizes the importance of using either a webcam or a DSLR setup, each requiring different strategies but relying on the same basic principles.

    • Key settings like brightness, contrast, color, and temperature are highlighted as essential for managing video quality.

    • LUT presets are mentioned as a tool for applying color adjustments quickly and consistently in post-production.

  • Focus on Webcam Use Case 0:51

    • Josh Lomelino explains that he will primarily focus on the webcam use case, as it is likely the dominant form of production for most people.

    • He discusses the benefits of using specific software applications for webcams, such as Logitech, to manage image quality settings.

    • The Logitech settings control panel is used as an example to demonstrate managing all aspects of the image, starting with brightness adjustments.

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of setting up the environment and lighting properly to minimize ongoing adjustments.

  • White Balancing and Color Adjustments 2:28

    • Josh explains the process of white balancing, using neutral objects like teeth or a white piece of paper to calibrate the camera.

    • He advises adjusting brightness, contrast, and color settings, and suggests testing variations by screenshotting or recording short clips.

    • He shares a personal anecdote about a time when his video looked off due to incorrect white balancing, leading to concerns about his health.

    • The importance of locking in settings, screenshotting results, and storing them for future reference is emphasized.

  • Post-Production Adjustments 4:06

    • Josh discusses the use of post-production tools like Camtasia and Premiere Pro for making quick adjustments if the video still doesn't look right.

    • He mentions using LUT presets, either out of the box or custom ones, to enhance video quality in post-production.

    • Josh considers this a fallback plan rather than a primary method but acknowledges its effectiveness.

    • He introduces Lumetri color in Premiere Pro as an advanced tool for achieving high-quality, polished video quickly and efficiently.

  • Comparing Video Quality and Final Thoughts 5:00

    • Josh highlights the importance of being mindful of all aspects of video quality to compare content side by side with others.

    • He emphasizes the goal of producing excellent on-camera performances with outstanding video quality.

    • Josh concludes the video by mentioning that he will see the audience in the next video.

 


Read More

14: Creating and Avatar Collection


Keywords: Digital, doubles, AI, tools, lighting, image, quality, training, model, green


In this tutorial, Josh guides viewers through creating high-quality digital doubles using AI technology. By following his detailed workflow, users will learn how to record themselves with optimal lighting, camera angles, and techniques to capture natural movements. The process involves creating multiple avatar variations with a consistent naming system, allowing for seamless video production and editing. After completing the tutorial, viewers will be able to generate professional, versatile digital avatars that can be used across different video projects with ease and consistency.


Description

In this tutorial, Josh guides viewers through creating high-quality digital doubles using AI technology. By following his detailed workflow, users will learn how to record themselves with optimal lighting, camera angles, and techniques to capture natural movements. The process involves creating multiple avatar variations with a consistent naming system, allowing for seamless video production and editing. After completing the tutorial, viewers will be able to generate professional, versatile digital avatars that can be used across different video projects with ease and consistency.


Outcomes

Following are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  1. Create multiple avatar variations with a consistent naming system

  2. Record high-quality source footage for AI digital double training

  3. Select optimal recording environments (green screen or natural settings)

  4. Capture multiple camera angles for flexible video production

  5. Apply three-point lighting techniques for professional video quality

  6. Use camera settings to record in 4K resolution

  7. Develop a systematic approach to avatar creation and management

  8. Experiment with different avatar styles and gestures

  9. Optimize video recording for AI digital double learning

  10. Implement a multi-camera editing workflow for seamless avatar transitions


 

Summary

  • Building Digital Doubles from Scratch 0:08

    • Josh Lomelino explains the importance of following earlier steps, especially around lighting and image quality, to avoid costly post-production fixes.

    • He emphasizes the need for a two-minute video of oneself speaking directly to the camera, suggesting the use of a wireless mouse for discreet recording.

    • Josh prefers recording against a green screen for flexibility in background changes, but acknowledges the natural setting option.

    • He recommends experimenting with different avatars, using a consistent numbering system for organization, and provides examples of naming conventions for avatar variations.

  • Creating and Managing Avatars 3:19

    • Josh discusses the importance of capturing as many versions as possible for each outfit in one session to ensure consistency in hair, lighting, and clothing.

    • He explains his approach to recording multiple shots or angles simultaneously using different camera angles and a multi-cam edit in video editing software.

    • The three essential angles he always records are a close-up, a medium shot, and a three-quarter side view.

    • Josh mentions the challenges some AI tools pose with the three-quarter view but recommends capturing it for added realism and variety.

  • Recording and Equipment Considerations 4:43

    • Josh advises using a Logitech 4K webcam for better image quality, though a 1080p camera can also yield decent results.

    • He shares his experience with different recording devices, including a phone's rear-facing camera in 4K, a webcam, and a DSLR, and emphasizes the need for experimentation.

    • Josh recommends using the built-in Windows or Mac camera app for recording at the highest resolution possible, with instructions on adjusting settings to force 4K recording.

    • He advises recording a clip without the green screen, looking straight into the camera, and speaking casually to ensure the digital double learns natural behavior.

  • Batch Creating Avatars 6:07

    • Josh introduces a workflow in his video editing software for batch creating avatars, which speeds up the process.

    • He mentions the importance of recording a clip that is at least two minutes long to avoid issues with awkward movements being mimicked by the avatar.

    • Josh explains his setup for recording, including using an adjustable camera arm mounted to his desk for flexibility.

    • He concludes the demo by stating that he will cover more in the next video, indicating the end of the current session.


Read More

15: Create Contextual Data with Otter


Keywords: AI, transcription, video, Bloom's Taxonomy, metadata, learner outcomes, content, table, contents, time, codes, interactive chapters, prompts


Learn how to transform lengthy video content into easily digestible, learner-friendly resources using AI technology. This tutorial demonstrates how to automatically generate comprehensive text information including descriptions, educational outcomes, and detailed summaries directly from video transcripts. By utilizing tools like Otter AI and Anomaly Amp, you'll discover a streamlined method to create navigation cues, time-coded summaries, and interactive chapters that enhance viewer understanding and engagement. The process requires minimal manual effort while providing maximum value for learners seeking to quickly grasp the key points of extended video content.


Description

Learn how to transform lengthy video content into easily digestible, learner-friendly resources using AI technology. This tutorial demonstrates how to automatically generate comprehensive text information including descriptions, educational outcomes, and detailed summaries directly from video transcripts. By utilizing tools like Otter AI and Anomaly Amp, you'll discover a streamlined method to create navigation cues, time-coded summaries, and interactive chapters that enhance viewer understanding and engagement. The process requires minimal manual effort while providing maximum value for learners seeking to quickly grasp the key points of extended video content.


Outcomes

Following are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  1. Analyze the process of using AI tools to generate comprehensive video metadata

  2. Generate automated transcripts and summaries using Otter AI

  3. Create detailed video descriptions and educational outcomes with minimal manual effort

  4. Extract key thematic points and time-coded sections from video content

  5. Implement interactive chapters and navigation cues in video presentations

  6. Transform lengthy video demonstrations into learner-friendly, easily navigable resources


 

Summary

  • Generating Text Information for Video Content 0:09

    • Josh Lomelino introduces the purpose of the video: to show how to generate text information to support video content.

    • He explains the challenges of long videos and the time-consuming process of creating a manual table of contents.

    • Josh suggests using AI to automatically generate contextual and navigation cues for viewers.

    • He outlines the four main cues for learners: description, outcomes, table of contents, and interactive chapters.

  • Using Otter AI App for Transcription 1:40

    • Josh explains the process of using the Otter AI app to generate a transcript of a finished video.

    • He details the steps of dragging and dropping the video file into the Otter user interface for transcription.

    • Once the transcription is complete, Josh shows how to access the Summary tab to extract the table of contents.

    • He emphasizes the importance of the Summary tab in providing thematic breakdowns and time ranges.

  • Creating Descriptions and Educational Outcomes 3:44

    • Josh demonstrates how to generate a three to four sentence description using AI prompts in Otter.

    • He explains the process of copying and pasting the description into the Anomaly Amp system.

    • Josh highlights the importance of providing a list of educational outcomes for learners.

    • He shows how to use AI prompts to generate a list of outcomes based on the training script.

  • Formatting and Organizing Content 4:53

    • Josh provides tips on formatting the content in the Anomaly Amp system.

    • He suggests making the time codes appear as text summaries and setting them as heading two (h2) in bold.

    • Josh explains how to create a clear message under the outcomes heading to guide learners.

    • He recommends using either a numbered or bulleted list for the outcomes.

  • Finalizing the Detailed Summary 5:28

    • Josh completes the detailed summary by including time codes for each item in the video.

    • He reiterates that the process requires minimal manual work and produces valuable content for learners.

    • Josh mentions the importance of reviewing training on Bloom's Taxonomy for proper verb usage in AI tools.

    • He offers supplemental files to help train AI tools to use the correct verbs for the level of learning.

  • Introduction to Interactive table of Contents 6:18

    • Josh announces the next video, which will cover the fourth component: the interactive table of contents.

    • He explains that this component converts the table of contents into interactive chapters in the video.

    • Josh highlights the benefits of this feature for users on various devices.

    • He promises to show the process of creating interactive metadata in the next video.

 

 

 

Outline


Read More

16: Generate Video Chapters with AI


Keywords: Interactive chapters, video, chapters, AI, tools, Vimeo, Portal, Anomaly AMP, metadata


Generate Video Chapters with AI


Description

Learn how to transform your educational videos by adding interactive chapters using Vimeo and Otter.ai. This tutorial will guide you through the process of creating an enhanced video learning experience with an interactive table of contents. You'll discover how to easily add precise chapter markers that allow learners to navigate directly to specific sections of your video. By the end of this demonstration, you'll be able to create a more engaging and user-friendly video interface that improves learner interaction and comprehension.


Outcomes

Following are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  1. Navigate the Vimeo portal to upload and edit video content

  2. Activate AI-powered chapter generation tools

  3. Compare and replace automatic chapters with precise, manually curated chapters

  4. Integrate Otter.ai transcript information into Vimeo's chapter interface

  5. Create an interactive table of contents for educational videos

  6. Enhance video learning experiences with precise, clickable chapter markers

  7. Implement metadata components that improve learner engagement and navigation


 

Summary

  • Adding Interactive Chapters to Videos 0:09

    • Josh Lomelino explains the process of creating an interactive table of contents in the video player using two AI tools.

    • The first step involves logging into the Vimeo Portal using provided credentials and uploading the video through Anomaly Amp.

    • Users should navigate to the interactivity section in the main toolbar, activate the AI chapters tool, and wait for Vimeo to generate initial chapters.

    • Josh recommends using Otter's chapter information for more accuracy and precision, as Vimeo's automatic chapters may not be as effective.

  • Editing and Saving Chapters 2:13

    • Josh suggests loading the chapter information from Otter and copying and pasting it into the Vimeo interface.

    • Users need to add a chapter name and time code for each chapter, which can be derived from Otter's transcript.

    • It's crucial to save the transcript information to ensure it stores correctly in the Vimeo dataset.

    • Josh advises refreshing the page in Anomaly Amp after saving to confirm the chapters are present.

  • Finalizing and Publishing the Video 3:45

    • Once all chapters are added and saved, users should publish the video to make it available to learners.

    • The published video will include a description, learner outcomes, a table of contents, and an interactive table of contents.

    • This setup allows learners to interact with the content while viewing the video in picture-in-picture mode.

    • Josh concludes the demo by emphasizing the immersive learning experience created by the interactive table of contents.

 

 

 


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17: The Three Weeks That Changed Everything


AMP LinkedIn Week 1


Why the More I Planned, the Less I Launched — and the Three Weeks That Changed Everything


Stuck on the Whiteboard

Launch Diagram

Nine months. That’s how long my membership launch lived on a whiteboard. Every week, I added more ideas, more sticky notes, more to-dos. And every week, I was no closer to going live.

If you’ve ever felt buried under your own plans, you know the weight. The irony is that my mountain of planning was the very thing keeping me from taking the first step. Here’s how I went from paralyzed by preparation to launched — with paying members — in just three weeks.

table="false">
 

The Illusion of Progress

I remember standing in my office one Thursday afternoon, staring at the board. On one side was a list of forty-seven must-have features. On the other, a launch calendar with more arrows, colors, and timelines than a NASA mission.

I was stuck. Not because I didn’t care — I cared too much. I wanted the launch to be perfect: flawless videos, a polished funnel, airtight automations. The problem was, I was treating my membership like it needed to open as a finished empire instead of a simple starting point.

Every day I thought, I’ll start recording once I finish mapping the bonus modules. Or, I’ll build the checkout once I’ve found the perfect upsell. It felt productive, but deep down, I knew it wasn’t movement. It was delay in disguise. And with each passing week, the gap between where I was and where I wanted to be only grew wider.

Then something snapped. I had just finished a call with a friend, another entrepreneur who launched her program with one core module and an email subscription membership. She had paying members in a week. It wasn’t jealousy that got me. It was clarity. She wasn’t waiting for perfect. She was building momentum.

That day, I erased the whiteboard and decided I would launch in twenty-one days, no matter what.

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The Momentum Launch

I called it my momentum launch. Instead of trying to launch everything, I focused on three things: a clear promise — the result members could expect after thirty days inside; a minimal viable experience — the smallest content needed to deliver that promise; and a simple sign-up path — one page, one checkout, no detours.

The moment I committed, everything shifted. Decisions became easier. If it didn’t serve those three goals, it didn’t make the cut. I swapped my forty-seven must-have features for three lessons recorded on my phone. I replaced my complex funnel map with a single landing page. And instead of spending two weeks choosing a webinar platform, I sent personal invites by email.

On day twenty-one, my imperfect membership opened to paying members. No massive content library. No cinematic videos. No labyrinth of automations. Just a clear promise, a simple experience, and a way to pay.

And the craziest part? Those members were more engaged than I’d ever seen in my later, more polished launches.

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Five Steps to Your Own 3-Week Launch

If you’re stuck in the planning loop, here’s how to run your own three-week momentum launch:

Step 1: Define the Promise, Not the Product Your members aren’t buying a collection of modules — they’re buying a transformation. Write one sentence: after thirty days in my membership, you will be able to [fill in the blank].

Step 2: Build the Minimum Viable Experience Start with the smallest content set that delivers the promised result — maybe three lessons, one live call, or a simple challenge.

Step 3: Create a Simple Sign-Up Path Confusion kills conversion. Keep it to one landing page, one clear pitch, and one join now button.

Step 4: Set a Non-Negotiable Launch Date Give yourself twenty-one days. Announce it. Work backward. Eliminate the fluff.

Step 5: Launch and Learn Treat it as a beta. Your goal isn’t perfection — it’s proof.

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Done Is Better Than Perfect

I get it. You want your first launch to be flawless. But perfection is a moving target, and the people you’re meant to help aren’t waiting for perfect. They’re waiting for you.

Those members from my imperfect launch? Many are still with me today. Not because I had the slickest platform or fanciest videos, but because I got them results. You don’t need more time. You need a start date. You don’t need a bigger plan. You need a smaller, sharper one. And you don’t need permission. You need momentum.

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Take the First Step

If you’re ready to stop circling your launch and start moving, I’ve put together my Momentum Map — the exact twenty-one day checklist I used to go from stuck to launched with my first paying members. It’s free, and it’s built for busy entrepreneurs who want to start earning without building a content empire first.

Send me a message and I'll send it to you.

Your membership doesn’t have to be perfect to change lives. But it does have to exist. Let’s make sure it does — three weeks from today.


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18: AMP LinkedIn Week 2


AMP LinkedIn Week 2


The Red Light Fear

The first time I turned on my camera to record a course, I froze.

My hands were sweaty. My mouth went dry. My carefully written notes blurred together like nonsense. I stumbled through three sentences, stopped, hit delete, and shoved the camera back in its box.

For weeks, it sat on my desk like a silent judge.

Every day I avoided recording was another day I delayed building my membership. But I kept telling myself, I’ll start once I feel more confident. I’ll start when I have the right setup.

And here’s the truth: if you’ve ever felt this way, you’re not alone. Being on camera feels vulnerable. It forces you to see yourself the way others do.

But avoiding the camera doesn’t just hold back your content — it holds back your business.

Why the Camera Feels Different

Here’s what I eventually realized: it wasn’t that I lacked confidence as a teacher. I’d spoken to classrooms, led workshops, even presented on stage. Live teaching energized me.

But the moment the little red light blinked on, something changed.

Why? Because the camera felt like a spotlight without feedback. No nods, no smiles, no laughter to ease the tension. Just me, alone with my own self-doubt.

That self-doubt whispered:

  • What if I look awkward?

  • What if I sound unprofessional?

  • What if nobody takes me seriously?

Those whispers grew louder than my content.

And instead of pressing record, I started tinkering with gear. Maybe a better microphone would help. Or professional lights. Or a script so tight I couldn’t possibly mess it up.

Spoiler: none of that solved the real problem.

The Turning Point

One day, a mentor asked me a question that changed everything.

“If you had 10 of your ideal clients sitting in a room right now, could you teach them?”

I laughed. “Of course.”

“Then do exactly that,” he said. “Talk to the camera like those 10 people are right there.”

That single shift broke the spell. I stopped seeing the camera as a machine judging me and started seeing it as a bridge connecting me to real people.

The first video I recorded after that wasn’t perfect. I stumbled over a phrase. My lighting was uneven. But when I watched it back, something struck me: it still worked. My teaching came through.

And when I finally shared it? My audience didn’t care about the stumbles. They cared about the clarity, the story, and the value.

That’s when I realized: confidence isn’t a prerequisite for recording. Confidence is the result of recording.

Five Steps to On-Camera Confidence

If the camera is holding you back from launching your course or membership, here’s a simple roadmap I wish I’d had sooner:

Step 1: Focus on One Person, Not an Audience
Imagine your best client sitting across from you. Record your video as if you’re speaking only to them. The intimacy makes your delivery warmer and more natural.

Step 2: Lower the Stakes
Stop treating your first recordings like a TED Talk. Start with a 3–5 minute tip video. One take, no pressure. The point isn’t perfection — it’s momentum.

Step 3: Create Comfort Through Familiarity
Record in a setting you already feel relaxed in — your home office, a quiet corner, even your kitchen table. Confidence grows where comfort lives.

Step 4: Watch Yourself With Curiosity, Not Criticism
When reviewing your video, ask: Did I explain this clearly? Would my client understand it? Don’t obsess over your hair, voice, or background. Your audience won’t.

Step 5: Practice Consistency Over Perfection
Confidence is a muscle. Record regularly, even if you never publish some takes. Every rep makes the next one easier.

The Belief Shift

For months, I thought I needed to become someone else to be confident on camera. Maybe more polished, more charismatic, more “professional.”

But the truth is, I didn’t need to become someone else. I needed to become more myself.

Confidence didn’t come from fancier gear or flawless delivery. It came from letting go of performance and focusing on connection.

Once I stopped trying to impress and started trying to serve, everything changed.

Why This Matters for Your Business

The longer you avoid the camera, the longer you delay your membership growth.

Video accelerates trust. It allows your audience to see your face, hear your voice, and feel your authenticity in ways text alone never can.

You don’t need to master video to get results. You just need to show up.

Because your audience isn’t waiting for a polished performer. They’re waiting for you — the real you, sharing what you know in the way only you can.

Take the First Step

If camera nerves are holding you back, I’ve put together my On-Camera Confidence Checklist — the 7 steps I used to go from frozen to fluent on video.

It’s free, and it’s designed for entrepreneurs who want to record authentic, engaging lessons without waiting until they “feel ready.”

Send me a message and I'll connect you with what you need to move forward.

The fastest way to get better on camera is to start.
This checklist will help you take that first step today.


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19: Build AI-Powered MVPs


Discover how to take your app idea from concept to high-fidelity MVP with lightning speed in this hands-on demo! You’ll learn how to organize product requirements, train AI tools using your own user stories, and craft powerful prompts that supercharge no-code and low-code platforms like Lovable and Thunkable. Watch step-by-step as we merge user insights, automate prototype creation, and iterate rapidly to build a functional, customizable app without writing code. Whether you're a founder, designer, or developer, this demo will empower you to launch better products, faster.


Description

Discover how to take your app idea from concept to high-fidelity MVP with lightning speed in this hands-on demo! You’ll learn how to organize product requirements, train AI tools using your own user stories, and craft powerful prompts that supercharge no-code and low-code platforms like Lovable and Thunkable. Watch step-by-step as we merge user insights, automate prototype creation, and iterate rapidly to build a functional, customizable app without writing code. Whether you're a founder, designer, or developer, this demo will empower you to launch better products, faster.

After watching this video, viewers will be able to efficiently structure and document their product ideas, train AI tools with custom user stories and requirements, and generate detailed prompts for building full-featured app prototypes. They'll learn how to merge, organize, and optimize user stories to maximize productivity and reduce costs with AI-driven app builders like Lovable and Thunkable. By following these steps, viewers can rapidly create, customize, and iterate on high-fidelity MVPs, preparing their apps for further refinement and deployment. This workflow empowers users to leverage multiple no-code platforms and streamline their app development from concept to actionable prototype.


Outcomes

Following are the key things you will be able to do after you watch this demo:

  • Define product requirements and user stories for AI-driven development.
  • Train AI tools using custom user data and technical documentation.
  • Merge and refine user stories and features into organized, actionable sets.
  • Compose structured prompts to automate no-code and low-code app creation.
  • Export prototypes and app data for version control and further development.
  • Integrate external tools and databases for enhanced app capabilities.
  • Iterate and customize MVP solutions across multiple development platforms.

Summary

  • Understanding Pricing and Pre-Composing Chats 0:11

    • Josh Lomelino explains the importance of understanding pricing in AI apps, emphasizing that credits are tied to prompts and chats.

    • He advises pre-composing chats in tools like ChatGPT to avoid high costs in apps like Lovable, which charge based on daily credits.

    • Josh demonstrates how to go back to prior steps in ChatGPT to train the system on user stories and features.

    • He highlights the need to ensure the chat is trained universally across all chats, otherwise, it needs to be asked to do so explicitly.

  • Training and Managing Chats 4:53

    • Josh discusses the process of training chats on system functionality, using SRT files as an example.

    • He explains the incremental compounding of work in Lovable, which makes it costly to start chatting without a well-defined prompt.

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of optimizing the use of credits to avoid high costs, comparing it to the cost of a development team.

    • He mentions the potential for the browser to choke on large chats and the need to break them into manageable parts.

  • Merging and Organizing User Stories 7:17

    • Josh demonstrates how to merge multiple chats to create a faster and more efficient chat.

    • He explains the process of outputting user stories as a CSV and the challenges with special characters in CSV files.

    • Josh suggests exporting as an Excel file to fix formatting issues.

    • He highlights the importance of incrementally building a pipeline to automate the creation of front-end interface screens.

  • Enhancing User Stories with Features and Acceptance Criteria 9:36

    • Josh adds a feature column to the user story backlog, differentiating it from user story language.

    • He includes acceptance criteria, which helps in testing and identifying the area within the app where the feature would exist.

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of documenting key wins and moments in a Google Doc for future reference.

    • He explains the process of comparing the current chat output with a saved Word file to ensure completeness.

  • Creating a Master Prompt for Lovable 17:44

    • Josh discusses the process of creating a master prompt for Lovable, which includes context, logical structure, explicit instructions, and adaptive considerations.

    • He highlights the need for granular detail to get specific UI controls in the prompt.

    • Josh explains the importance of saving the output as a Google Doc or GitHub repository for version control.

    • He demonstrates how to rewrite the master prompt to include all features in one MVP release.

  • Training Lovable on Documentation 42:48

    • Josh trains Lovable on the documentation of the tool, which helps in creating a prompt for Lovable.

    • He explains the process of crawling through the documentation pages and listing the pages learned from.

    • Josh emphasizes the importance of checking that the AI is actually doing what it claims to do.

    • He demonstrates how to extract and summarize recommendations from the AI.

  • Refining and Customizing the App 45:00

    • Josh refines and customizes the app by adjusting colors and mastering prompting.

    • He explains the process of using chat mode to plan additional features like a coach and admin portal.

    • Josh demonstrates how to toggle between different device types to test the app on various form factors.

    • He highlights the importance of iterating on the app to ensure it meets user needs and pain points.

  • Exploring Different Tools and Integrations 49:51

    • Josh explores different tools like Thunkable, Bubble IO, Cursor, Replit, Flutter Flow, and Draftbit.

    • He explains the process of training the AI on the documentation of these tools to create a single prompt.

    • Josh highlights the importance of integrating tools like Supabase and Airtable for data management.

    • He emphasizes the need to experiment with different tools to find the best fit for the project.

  • Finalizing the MVP and Next Steps 1:04:33

    • Josh finalizes the MVP by ensuring all features are included in the prompt.

    • He explains the process of exporting the code base and pushing it to GitHub for further development.

    • Josh highlights the importance of iterating on the app to ensure it meets user needs and pain points.

    • He explains the next steps of refining and customizing the app, and preparing it for deployment to the app stores.


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