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Pixlr Editor

Pixlr Editor
Related:  Creación y Publicación de Contenido

PowToon, free business presentation software animated video maker and PowerPoint alternative Twitch.tv Live-streaming platform History Founding and initial growth (2007–2013) Growth, YouTube acquisition speculation (2014) Amazon subsidiary (2014–present) Content As a teaching tool Charity Esports Professional sports On March 18, 2021 Amazon signed an Exclusive contact with the NFL allowing Twitch and Amazon prime to stream all of the league’s TNF games (15 total) along with 1 preseason game per year, a possible Saturday game late in the season and a wild card simulcast (The late season exclusive Saturday game was added during the 2020 and 2021 seasons) Emotes Creators and audience Streamers Users Partner and affiliate programs Content moderation and restrictions Copyrighted content Mature content Hate speech and harassment Internet censorship Asia Platform support Twitch Desktop App and CurseForge TwitchCon See also List of social networking services References External links

Wikispaces YouTube (channel) YouTube's official video channel YouTube's channel on YouTube Screencastify (Screen Video Recorder) Prezi Online presentation design platform Prezi is a Hungarian video and visual communications software company founded in 2009 in Hungary, with offices in San Francisco, Budapest and Riga as of 2020.[1] According to Prezi, in 2021, the software company has more than 100 million users worldwide[2] who have created approximately 400 million presentations.[3][1][4] In 2019, they launched Prezi Video, a tool that allows for virtual presentations within the video screen of a live or recorded video.[5] The word Prezi is the short form of "presentation" in Hungarian.[6] As of January 2022, the company had around 300 employees in 13 countries.[7] In early 2011, Prezi launched its first iPad application. That same year, it received $14M in Series B venture capital funding led by Accel Partners.[11] A Prezi iPhone app was launched in late 2012.[12] In July 2020, Prezi named President Jim Szafranski as the new CEO, and announced that Co-Founder and CEO Peter Arvai would become Executive Chairman. [edit]

Wikinews Free-content news wiki; project of the Wikimedia Foundation As of July 2022, Wikinews sites are active in 29 languages,[1] with a total of 1,736,016 articles and 579 recently active editors.[5] Wikinews editors are known as wikinewsies. Early years[edit] The beta version logo, used until February 13, 2005 The first recorded proposal of a Wikimedia news site was a two-line anonymous post on January 5, 2003, on Wikipedia community's Meta-Wiki.[6][7] Daniel Alston, who edited Wikipedia as Fonzy,[8] claimed to have been the one who posted it.[6][9] The proposal was then further developed by German freelance journalist, software developer, and author Erik Möller.[6] Early opposition from long-time Wikipedia contributors, many of them pointing out the existence of Wikipedia's own news summaries, gave way to detailed discussions and proposals about how it could be implemented as a new project of the Wikimedia Foundation. Interviews[edit] Criticism[edit] Language editions[edit] See also[edit]

Wikipedia Wikipedia ( pronunciation ) is a free online encyclopedia website in 334 languages of the world, 323 languages which are currently active and 11 are closed. People can freely use it, share it, and change it, without having to pay. It is also one of the biggest wiki organizations. People can choose to donate to the Wikimedia Foundation to fund Wikipedia and its sister projects. It is an open content website. Wikipedia is owned by an American organization, the Wikimedia Foundation, which is in San Francisco, California. Wikipedia's name is a portmanteau of two words, wiki and encyclopedia.[3] Wikipedia was started on January 10, 2001, by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger as part of an earlier online encyclopedia named Nupedia. Anyone who wishes to can change the pages on Wikipedia, or even make new ones. As of September 2011, Wikipedia had about 18 million pages in about 300 languages and more than 3.50 billion words across all Wikipedias. History[change | change source]

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