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Embedding a Video on My Facebook Page

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Since the advent of the iFrame, some of the rules of implementing the fan page have been changed.
Whether for better or worse, you will have to be the judge.
An iFrame actually is a partition that allows the web page or Facebook page to be sliced into divisions that are more useable than a solid page.
The iFrame can scroll with or independent of the actual page, and can hold video, photos or other print media.
It can also connect your blog and website across the ether and join them onto your Facebook page.
Thereby integrating and linking the three entities for your prospective audience.
Also, take note that an iFrame doesn't need to be loaded online to be viewed, but it is an acceptable form to be posted online independently.
I advise that you follow the next steps carefully, because, in some template applications, the process to editing after posting the iFrame can be a lengthy process.
If you are interested in posting using an iFrame on Facebook, you will fall in one of a couple camps.
Either you know how to write HTML code and none of this will apply to you.
We'll skip you because you won't even be reading this article.
Or you desperately want in to the internet field and have run into a solid brick wall because you don't know HTML and have tried to learn and are simply not getting it.
Don't feel bad, Grasshopper, you are not alone...
Now, you can handle it a few ways, take it as a loss and go and pay someone to do it for you, or quit trying, or you can look for another solution.
Times have progressed since the inception of the iFrame, so if you don't know how to write HTML code there are other solutions available.
It is relatively easy to find templates that meet the criteria you need.
These templates eliminate the need to learn HTML code and also make the process a breeze.
Some people regarded the iFrame as a fad, but the truth is the iFrame is here to stay.
And it's probably in all of our best interest to regard them as the next skill in line that we have to learn.
All of the iFrame applications can be modified to be used to embed video on your site or page.
In fact it is required that the iFrame does connect to another page.
You can create your own iFrame or use one that was created by someone else.
In selecting an iFrame application to use there are a few criteria that come up as outlines to rate the varied ones that are available.
It should be easy to use and edit.
It should create a product that is pleasing, and it should be fast on the page.
Leading you to the next step, once you have an appropriate template in your possession,embedding your video becomes contingent on where you are interested in putting your video.
If it is a simple webpage, the video would have to be compressed and uploaded to a video platform like Easy Video Player, YouTube.
On YouTube you would click embed, and select the custom field and make sure that you type in 500 pixels so that it will fit in the iFrame application that Facebook requires.
Automatically the code changes to the 500 pixels that you selected.
You copy that entire code, and paste the code into the corresponding blank on your selected template.
Find the preview button on your template, and on the template there is an installation code.
This code is what enables you to install the completed template on to your waiting web page.
Remember to save all of the changes to your page and then review your finished product! It is a lengthy process, but well worth the effort.
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