Whiz Comics
Whiz Comics

Send Your Love and Regards With Video Greeting Cards
Video greeting cards are a new way to ensure your card always reaches your intended on time. No more checking on the postal strikes, paying extortionate amounts for stamps or fighting off the winter rain to get to the mail box. With just a few minutes and a little creative imagination, you can create your own personalized, animated or video greeting cards, which can be reproduced and sent to as many people as you wish.
Video cards are the by-product of software evolution. They once involved the skills of flash developers, animators and other creative influences, and were featured on sites such as Blue Mountain, who charged an annual fee upwards of $29.99. While their selection is extremely diverse, none of them can be truly personalized to the extent they stand out from any other e-cards someone might receive. Hail a revolution, in the form of greeting card software, designed with personalization in mind.
Now, you'd be forgiven for thinking the capabilities of greetings card software only extend to the creation of print-out cards and invitations, however, you'd be mistaken. Card making software demonstrate a whole new world of capability and customization. Create anything from mini-movies to slide shows to include in your e-greetings card, and truly convey the sentiment intended. Surpass expectation with the inclusion of family video clips or your own recorded message. With e-greetings cards, anything is possible!
What is a Video Card?
Video cards are more commonly referred to as "e-greetings cards" or "e-cards"; electronic cards which can be sent via email, or from another online communication medium. The evolution of software has now recognized the ability to upload and import video clips into your card creation, so you are no longer limited to the generic flash animations provided by online sources.
E-Cards vs. Traditional Cards
Whether you are considering e-cards as a business stationary tool, or for personal use, the advantages are endless. For a small price, you can obtain software, which can then be used endlessly to create hundreds of thousands of cards, at no additional cost. You also bypass the printing process, conserving your printer ink and paper reserves. Think of your carbon footprint too. The less paper and ink you actually use, the more beneficial it is to the environment.
The obvious benefit of sending an e-card in place of a traditional card is the expense. Single cards cost anything upwards of $2, while a Christmas box set containing 10-20 realizes upward of $6. A greetings card maker can be purchased for a one-off price, with unlimited usage opportunity.
The mail service is significantly less reliable than it used to be, and traditional cards can often arrive far later, whether or not they were posted on time. With an e-card, you never have to worry about missing an important date again, because they are instant, and viewable in a matter of minutes, upon receipt.
Creative Capabilities
No longer does one have to be a skilled flash animator or Adobe whiz to create a stunning video card. You can now create professional looking e-cards using the simple interface of greeting card software, and a choice of over 1000 templates. Studio cards, popular in the 1950's are also possible, now with the inclusion of video and multi-media. Import your own choice of music along with a comic video.
Create your own captions and subtitles to make it truly unique. Video editing software allows you to alter the saturation, color output and format of your video too, for even greater creative control. Greetings card software supports a whole host of video formats too, simplifying the instant sending process, and opening up alternative uses for creations: such as a YouTube movie.
Video cards have recognized the ability to develop unique and personal creations, while cutting out the time consuming processes of selection, shopping, queuing and sending. With new templates constantly being developed, you can also be assured you will always have a new influx of creative ideas for your designs.
Gwen Addison is an avid writer and greeting card sender. She highly recommends sending your family and friends personalized Video Greeting Cards with easy-to-use Greeting Card Software.
About the Author
When was Billy Batson born?
I have few my questions about Billy Batson /Captain Marvel.
--When was Billy Batson born?
--How was Captain Marvel old?
--Why don't have Captain Marvel's ID cards? For example: Birth Certificate card, other cards.
I read old Whiz comic No:47 with DVD ROM. One man who was polling man asked Capt. Marvel about ID cards. But he didn't have ID card. He failed to vote for his boss Mr. Morris because he didn't have ID cards.
Just one question..... Is Billy Batson NEVER grow up just like as Peter Pan?
you might get answers here.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Marvel_(DC_Comics)
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Whiz Comics
silly billy
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Movie review – Up in the Air (2009)
For more reviews and watch free : CLICK HERE
For a movie set in a sour economy, "Up in the Air" is very crafty about lobbing to the sweet spots of all concerned. It is smooth as glass, destined for a big audience and many awards. It is actively impossible to dislike, even when its protagonist is doing nominally dislikable things. Adapting the Walter Kirn novel, co-writer and director Jason Reitman ran the source material through the de-glib-erizer and handed George Clooney a nice big comfortable leading role as Ryan Bingham, downsizing expert and well-tailored hatchet man for an Omaha firm specializing in delivering bad news to laid-off employees.
Bingham is a man without a city. He spends six weeks out of the year in his unbearably drab apartment. The rest of the time he is flying, or about to. He has little in the way of meaningful personal connections, either to friends, sometime-lovers (a neighbor across the hall) or family. One sister in northern Wisconsin, played by Melanie Lynskey, is getting married; Bingham may go to the wedding or, fulfilling his other sister's low expectations of him, he may not. (Amy Morton is very droll as the other sister.)
He warms up screenplays so that, in his first and highly auspicious feature, "Thank You For Smoking," a rakish Big Tobacco lobbyist's progress became the stuff of better father/son relations. (That theme was there in the novel, but Reitman foregrounded it.) If Reitman had followed screenwriter Diablo Cody's script directives in his second film, "Juno," the film would've been far more broadly comic and, I suspect, a lot less popular. "Up in the Air" has been shaped for Clooney's prodigious, slightly melancholy charm as a comic leading man. Happily he has worthy sparring partners.
Vera Farmiga plays Alex, whom Bingham meets in a classically anonymous airport hotel bar one night. They compare notes on rental car firms, loyalty programs, frequent flier miles and quickly realize they're made for each other. The only question is the relationship's expiration date. Farmiga has never been better than she is here. Rarely does she get to do comedy, and she and Clooney give "Up in the Air's" sustained air of engaging disengagement a heartbeat as well as a romantic charge.
The other key character, a tightly wound whiz kid Bingham's forced to mentor, is played by Anna Kendrick, who has a way of spitting out each line as if it were a nail coming out of a nail gun. Her character proposes the Omaha company bring in their "road warriors" and start firing people via iChat. This raises Bingham's hackles and makes him more sympathetic.
Seeing "Up in the Air" earlier this year at the Toronto International Film Festival, its limited ambitions bugged me. Catching it again this week, I see how it could end up with best picture of 2009.
For more reviews and watch free : CLICK HERE
About the Author
http://istarmovie.com/up-in-the-air-2009/
Whiz Comics