Client’s Logo on Your VO Web Site

What’s that old adage: a picture is worth a thousand words? So how cool would it be to have Apple’s logo on your site, or Windows, Coke or Pepsi’s? Few things resonate as well as a high-profile brand on your site. It immediately suggests you have high-profile clients. Or, it could suggest you work for the competition; or you don’t respect copyright. Unless you have specific sponsors, long-term clients, or want to support a particular brand, it may not make sense to add a high-profile logo to your site (other than yours). If you have that close a relationship with a particular organization or company, well at least be sure to get written permission for use of that logo on your site.

Generally, that company will want to make sure your site doesn’t have offensive or other material it doesn’t want to be associated with. Once you have that permission, it’s always a good idea to add “XYZ logo courtesy of XYZ Ltd.” It tells other potential clients you have a good relationship with XYZ and respect their brand. On the other hand, XYZ might also want you to add a disclaimer that states it’s not associated with you nor responsible for the content of your site. That kind of disclaimer isn’t necessarily a problem, but it also doesn’t scream “great talent-client relationship.”

Bottom line: adding your client’s logo to your site isn’t always good; and it isn’t automatically okay.

Running Adobe Audition on a Mac

For those of you interested in a Mac but not eager to give up Adobe Audition (which has no Mac version), take a look at Parallels Desktop for Mac, which allows you to install a virtual machine (like another computer) running Windows OS on your Mac. I previously loaded and tested the beta of VMWare for Mac (Fusion), but sound cuts off. It’s infrequent but I developed trust issues. VMWare is still good software, free, and works solidly on Windows servers. However, they have some work yet to do for their Mac OS version. They’ll get there.

 

Parallels is already there. I loaded it and created my virtual machine running WinXP SP2 and all my high end software and it works incredibly well. Parallels Desktop version 3150 also has a feature they call Coherence which puts the icons for your active Windows programs directly on the Mac dock. Parallels also has no problem networking with the other computers in my home nor in sharing folders between the host Mac OS and the guest WinXP.

 

Through the shared folders, you can map a drive so that files you create or edit in Audition are saved directly to the host Mac (on the same hard drive) for FTP transfers, email, CD burning.

 

Windows also loads incredibly fast in a virtual machine environment; and of course, all the hardware is detected: sound card, usb, cd, ethernet card.

 

So far, so good. Whew!