Showing posts with label Google videos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google videos. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2008

Reason to not use Google Video

I can't stand this any longer. Google video has a hit counter on the videos we put up. There used to be a way to just look at the video and know how many times it was opened and downloaded. They dropped that when people view the video. As if that was not aggravating enough, they also constantly have problems with the hit counter in the account itself. While it does show your video files, that's just about all you can trust. You cannot find out how many times it was viewed most of the time because it keeps going back to zero. That's right! All the work people put into videos and Google cannot even give an accurate count on the number of times it was viewed. I can only imagine how frustrating this is for people who get over a million hits! I'm not one of them but I spend days and often weeks researching the videos on PTSD, searching for the right music to put these together. The least I can expect from Google is an accurate count but they can't even be bothered to answer a question without a form letter telling me all the issues they have and never once actually answering the question asked.

If you go into the message section and look at the postings put up about problems with Google video, you can see the frustration across the posts. How much money do they make off the advertising they charge? And they cannot be bothered to answer questions or get their act together enough so that the producers of the videos know where they stand as far as hits go?

I have never had videos vanish from YouTube and never had the hit count zero out. Whatever keeps happening with Google, they seem disinterested in answering the question and even less interested in solving the problem in the first place. Days later a zero hit count will be resolved but the account holder has no clue if it was fixed correctly or not. Don't they understand that people work very hard on these videos? They took over YouTube videos and you end up being able to trust YouTube more than you can them.

The biggest reason I use Google Video is that they have the capacity to hold larger video files. I have two that are about 20 minutes long and YouTube won't allow that size file. When it comes to having something coming up from now on, I have to consider the time frame more than the message and the information I want to get out on PTSD. Considering this is a life and death matter, it is vital to my work that I can trust where it is being uploaded to. I just wish Google would care about their account holders enough to at least provide a straight answer. Right now, I'm frustrated beyond belief!!!! Don't plan on any longer more detailed videos in the near future until I can trust Google video. They haven't earned it. Up until now I just posted the frustration in emails and a few on the message board. That got me no where and a lot of other people are just as frustrated at the lack of response from them.
4/14/08
Coming Out of The Dark of PTSD 0 0
Death Because They Served PTSD Suicides 0 0
Heal the wounds of PTSD 0 0
Hero After War Combat Vets and PTSD 0 0
Homeless_Veterans_Day.wmv 0 0
Nam Nights Of PTSD Still 0 0
Out Of Many One 0 0
PTSD After Trauma 0 0
PTSD Soldiers Wounded And Waiting 0 0
The Voice Women At War 0 0
Veterans Every Day 0 0
When War Comes Home PTSD 0 0
When War Comes Home Part Two 0 0
Wounded Minds PTSD and Veterans 0 0
Wounded Minds Veterans and PTSD 0 0

Monday, October 8, 2007

148,000 Vietnam Vets sought help in last 18 months

In the past 18 months, 148,000 Vietnam veterans have gone to VA centers reporting symptoms of PTSD "30 years after the war," said Brig. Gen. Michael S. Tucker, deputy commanding general of the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command and Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He recently visited El Paso.



Two-tiered system of healthcare puts veterans of the war on terror at the top and makes everyone else -- from World War I to the first Gulf War -- "second-class veterans"
by Chris Roberts, El Paso Times
An internal directive from a high-ranking Veterans Affairs official creates a two-tiered system of veterans health care, putting veterans of the global war on terror at the top and making every one else -- from World War I to the first Gulf War -- "second-class veterans," according to some veterans advocates.

"I think they're ever pushing us to the side," said former Marine Ron Holmes, an El Paso resident who founded Veterans Advocates. "We are still in need. We still have our problems, and our cases are being handled more slowly."

Vice Adm. Daniel L. Cooper, undersecretary for benefits in the Department of Veterans Affairs -- in a memo obtained by the El Paso Times -- instructs the department's employees to put Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans at the head of the line when processing claims for medical treatment, vocational rehabilitation, employment and education benefits...




Veterans Affairs officials say prioritizing war-on-terror veterans is necessary because many of them face serious health challenges. But they don't agree that other veterans will suffer, saying that they are hiring thousands of new employees, finding ways to train them more quickly and streamlining the process of moving troops from active duty to veteran status.

"We are concerned about it, and it's something we are watching carefully," said Jerry Manar, deputy director national veterans service for Veterans of Foreign Wars in Washington, D.C. "We'll learn quickly enough from talking with our veterans service officers whether they're seeing a dramatic slowdown in the processing of claims."

Manar and Holmes said Afghanistan and Iraq veterans deserve the best care possible, but so do all other veterans.
click post title for the rest


148,000 in 18 months. This tells me the outreach workers around the country are beginning to get through to them. It tells me the media paying attention to this is beginning to get through to them. The battles being fought for Vietnam Veterans are being won, but unless the funding is there to take care of all the combat wounded, we will lose the war.

I've spent the last 25 years trying to get through to them and so have an army of volunteers across the country. We don't use anything but compassion and facts. Sooner or later, if we keep trying, we will reach all the veterans with Post Traumatic Stress from this generation and beyond to all veterans, but what good will it do if the help they need is not there?

I started doing videos in February of 2006. Is this a coincidence? From the emails I get, it is part of it. It was the goal anyway.


When War Comes Home PTSD
2418
50

Veterans and PTSD version 1
All time views:14,283

Wounded Minds Veterans and PTSD version 2
1567
36

Wounded Minds PTSD and Veterans version 3
7777
176

PTSD After Trauma on Google
1709
85

End The Silence of PTSD on Youtube

Views: 2,919


Hero After War Combat Vets and PTSD on Google
3697
38

Views: 1,772 on Youtube


Coming Out of The Dark of PTSD on Google
889
33

Coming Out Of The Dark-PTSD&Veterans on Youtube

Views: 4,304


Death Because They Served PTSD Suicides
1442
14

Nothing else seemed to work as well as these videos did. They are being used in colleges, by service organizations and individuals all across the country as well as other nations. This wound does not know national borders.

After reading this, and knowing from personal experience, I wonder what good it does if the help is not being addressed as actively?

What good does it do the veterans if I can talk them into going for help, but they can't get to it? I'm working between 10 to 12 hours a day now on this 7 days a week. Where is the dedication of the people who have the power to make sure the help is there? The people working for the VA and service organizations have that dedication but the politicians don't seem as focused and certainly Bush is not when he threatened congress to not fund the VA unless they found the way to pay for it.

We keep getting promised the problems with the VA will be corrected but we don't know when that will happen. Someday will not make things easier on them! Yesterday would have! Last year would have! Twenty five years ago it would have!

Kathie Costos