+++ title= "Mango Animate’s Latest Software Helps Convert Text to Video Easily" date= 2021-07-21T00:34:35+08:00 tags = ["news"] type = "blog" categories = ["news"] banner = "img/banners/banner-3.jpg" +++
## Mango Animate’s Latest Software Helps Convert Text to Video Easily
Mango Animate has been facilitating users to create compelling animated videos since 2003. With its new simple, efficient text to video tool that makes animation technology accessible to everyone, Mango Animate has taken the world by storm. From small businesses looking to brand themselves to larger ones seeking to increase engagement rates, Mango Animate’s new software that can convert text to video has become the go-to tool for creating animated text videos.
The text video software offers fully customizable templates for the smooth creation of text videos. These templates can be modified at any time to add a personal touch, whether it’s for a specific campaign or event. In addition, because the templates are pre-animated, users do not have to worry about creating the animation from scratch. With the help of this stunning software, users are able to convert text to video effortlessly.
“Videos are a unique way to communicate a message because getting the message out there is hard as people aren’t fond of reading long text. Using an animated text video can be a great starting point to ensure that the viewers grasp the information completely. However, traditional methods to make animated text videos are time-consuming and expensive. Mango Animate offers high-quality, affordable text to video software that makes it uncomplicated to convert text to video in minutes free of cost,” says Winston Zhang, the CEO of Mango Animate.
This text video creator is built with the user in mind. It can not only convert text to video but also let users animate their stories in many ways. The software offers several key features that allow the user to customize the way they produce videos. It helps them choose from several free typographic animations to liven up the animated text videos. The typewriter effect, bouncing, sliding in, etc. — the software has them all. These animations can be applied anywhere within the videos and look great with photos or text!
To learn more about Mango Animate Text Video Maker, Please visit Mango Animate.
About Mango Animate
Mango Animate is a young and innovative animation video and gif maker, full of creativity and passion for fun and lively animated videos. Packed with a rich library of free media and templates, Mango Animate offers ready-to-go tools and elements to create stunning animated videos for any use, from education to marketing, appealing to all age groups. The software is dedicated to making video creation more accessible to everyone.
## Mango Animate Whiteboard Video Software Makes Strong First Impressions
Mango Animate provides users with whiteboard video software that can help them make amazing whiteboard animations for their brand to impress customers. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE / PRURGENT
In a world where so much vies for people’s attention every day, it’s important that businesses make an outstanding first impression. And considering that everyone nowadays seems to be in a great rush, they don’t have much time to make that impression. This is where whiteboard videos come in handy. They’re short and sweet – conveying any message quickly and convincingly. Mango Animate Whiteboard Animation Maker is whiteboard video software (https://school.mangoanimate.com/whiteboard-video-software/) that helps businesses to create that stellar first impression.
With Mango Animate WM there is no risk of creating a whiteboard video that looks amateur and unpolished. The easy-to-use whiteboard video software allows anyone to produce professional and classy results, even without animation skill or experience. This is due partly to the range of templates that span various industries. They make starting the process effortless.
Customizing the templates is seamless too. There’s a large library of royalty-free images and other media available in the whiteboard video software. Users can also import media of their choice to better match their brand’s identity. A variety of hand types in both genders, different colors, and sizes effectively draw the message into existence. Custom hands are supported for maximum creativity – import an image of any object and use it as the drawing tool.
Distinctive video content is key to attracting a fickle audience’s attention. This whiteboard video software features vivid backgrounds, creative effects for text and images, as well as dynamic characters that will entertain audiences and increase retention of video content. Such videos are more likely to result in persons taking the desired action than text ads, static images, or simple talking head videos.
Reaching out with the voice behind a brand is an excellent way to strengthen the connection with the target audience. The nifty voiceover tool in this whiteboard video software makes this simple. Just click record to add a voice to the video. The powerful audio editor will produce the perfect soundtrack. Enchanting animation and transition effects pull everything together, making for engaging videos. Users can animate backgrounds, characters, and text.
“I’m proud to say this is one of the best whiteboard video software on the market,” says Winston Zhang, CEO of Mango Animate.
For details about Mango Animate’s whiteboard video software, please visit http://mangoanimate.com/
About Mango Animate
Mango Animate provides top-class animation software. Their suite of products includes animated video makers and an animated character creator.
## Mango Animate Rolls Out a 3D Character Animation Software for Future-Proof Animations
Mango Animate Rolls Out a 3D Character Animation Software for Future-Proof Animations
https://school.mangoanimate.com/3d-character-animation-software-ranking-top-10-review/
Mango Animate has revealed its new 3D character animation software () to help users enhance their presentation skills. The company understands that character animations are now trending as they carry more weight in audience engagement. Using character animation videos helps to attract a large audience base since users can publish their projects on multiple platforms to expand their reach. It is also an excellent way of building brands as it helps to enhance messages and establish strong reputations among viewers.The 3D character animation software has advanced features for creating animated character videos that communicate a lot of information quickly. Through these videos, users tell their immersive stories to viewers in a memorable way. Communicating with 3D character animations saves users time while creating a lasting impression on their audiences. It gives them the leverage to boost their conversions and sales. Projects designed on Mango Animate are permanent sensations that viewers can revisit when impressed.“We designed our 3D character animation software to help businesses pass their messages much faster and efficiently,” said Ken Glenn, CMO of Mango Animate. “They have the power to design future-proof character animations that are delectable to all types of audiences. Their 3D projects will be able to connect with many people who appreciate them. And they’ll manage to increase sales and conversions.”With the 3D character animation software, businesses will now be able to design amazing visual effects for their products to win over consumers. Tools such as IK control, infinite customization, and motion effects produce super-realistic effects that portray the visual beauties of products. Mango Animate utilizes the latest technology to develop software that helps users improve their marketing strategies. With stunning character animations, it is easy to give viewers an immersive viewing experience as they deliver spectacular, realistic experiences.Businesses will now build their images using 3D character animations to ensure constant growth. Character animations add value to the market reputation of companies. They enhance their ability to positively depict and present products to customers with detailed explanations of their value and how they work. The 3D character animation software also provides users with ways to wide-spread their projects on digital platforms to boost leads and sales.For more information, please visitRoom 1003, 10/F, Tower 1,Lippo Centre, 89 Queensway, AdmiraltyHong KongWebsite:Email: pr@mangoanimate.comAbout Mango AnimateMango Animate ensures its clients have the right software for their projects’ needs.The company has developed various software products to meet the market demands of its customers. Their software is designed using the latest technology.
## Mango Animate Launches an Animation Video Maker That Helps Simplify Complex Ideas
Mango Animate Launches an Animation Video Maker That Helps Simplify Complex Ideas
https://mangoanimate.com/products/am?utm_source=openpr&utm_medium=PR&utm_campaign=mg-20090203
https://mangoanimate.com/?utm_source=openpr&utm_medium=PR&utm_campaign=mg-20090203
Mango Animate is an acclaimed software developer who turns users into professional designers and marketers. The company has just launched an animation video maker () for video content marketing. Now non-designers and designers can easily create stunning animated videos and share them with viewers worldwide. The software allows them access to innovative tools and functionalities that enrich their video projects and prepare them for the market.The animation video maker empowers users to harness the power of video content in SEO by helping them design videos that resonate with their target audiences' needs. They can customize roles, animations, and scenes to ensure they convey the right message in a more interactive, entertaining, and engaging manner. To spice up their creations, users can include subtitles and voice narrations that tap into viewers’ emotions. Even better, they can edit animations, change text, and update their videos at any time after publishing.“At Mango Animate, we know that animated videos can help marketers tell their stories comprehensively,” said Winston Zhang, CEO of Mango Animate. “That’s why we developed the animation video maker to help them simplify complex topics for their viewers. Modern consumers are looking for visual content on social platforms and other channels. So, designing the content audiences need is the best way for our users to generate more leads and increase conversions and sales.”With video content creating a buzz in the digital market, users have a better chance of ranking top on search engine result pages (SERPs) when using Mango Animate’s innovative tools. Their animation video maker is developed with the best industry standards to help users penetrate the local and international markets with their animation videos. The company allows them to leverage video technology capabilities to simplify concepts and ideas through animations and earn more traffic and revenue.Mango Animate helps users elevate their stories to a whole new level through dynamic and versatile animated videos that transition well from one scene to another. This is an excellent way for brands to appeal to the viewer's senses and convey important information. With appealing scene transitions and lively camera designs, the animated videos created at Mango Animate will remain rooted in viewers' memories for a long time, and they'll keep coming for more.For more information, please visitRoom 1003, 10/F, Tower 1,Lippo Centre, 89 Queensway, AdmiraltyHong KongWebsite:Tel: 86 020-61972665Email: pr@mangoanimate.comAbout Mango AnimateMango Animate is a leading developer of innovative software products and solutions that help its clients create and publish engaging animated videos online. Their software comes with advanced tools and features that empower users to reach out to a broader audience base through stunning animated videos.
## The Dark Side of Congo’s Cobalt Rush
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In June, 2014, a man began digging into the soft red earth in the back yard of his house, on the outskirts of Kolwezi, a city in the southern Democratic Republic of the Congo. As the man later told neighbors, he had intended to create a pit for a new toilet. About eight feet into the soil, his shovel hit a slab of gray rock that was streaked with black and punctuated with what looked like blobs of bright-turquoise mold. He had struck a seam of heterogenite, an ore that can be refined into cobalt, one of the elements used in lithium-ion batteries. Among other things, cobalt keeps the batteries, which power everything from cell phones to electric cars, from catching fire. As global demand for lithium-ion batteries has grown, so has the price of cobalt. The man suspected that his discovery would make him wealthy—if he could get it out of the ground before others did.
Southern Congo sits atop an estimated 3.4 million metric tons of cobalt, almost half the world’s known supply. In recent decades, hundreds of thousands of Congolese have moved to the formerly remote area. Kolwezi now has more than half a million residents. Many Congolese have taken jobs at industrial mines in the region; others have become “artisanal diggers,” or creuseurs. Some creuseurs secure permits to work freelance at officially licensed pits, but many more sneak onto the sites at night or dig their own holes and tunnels, risking cave-ins and other dangers in pursuit of buried treasure.
The man took some samples to one of the mineral traders who had established themselves around Kolwezi. At the time, the road into the city was lined with corrugated-iron shacks, known as comptoirs, where traders bought cobalt or copper, which is also plentiful in the region. (In the rainy season, the earth occasionally turns green, as a result of the copper oxides beneath it.) Many of the traders were Chinese, Lebanese, and Indian expats, though a few Congolese had used their mining profits to set up shops.
One trader told the man that the cobalt ore he’d dug up was unusually pure. The man returned to his district, Kasulo, determined to keep his find secret. Many of Kasulo’s ten thousand residents were day laborers; Murray Hitzman, a former U.S. Geological Survey scientist who spent more than a decade travelling to southern Congo to consult on mining projects there, told me that residents were “milling about all the time,” hoping for word of fresh discoveries.
Hitzman, who teaches at University College Dublin, explained that the rich deposits of cobalt and copper in the area started life around eight hundred million years ago, on the bed of a shallow ancient sea. Over time, the sedimentary rocks were buried beneath rolling hills, and salty fluid containing metals seeped into the earth, mineralizing the rocks. Today, he said, the mineral deposits are “higgledy-piggledy folded, broken upside down, back-asswards, every imaginable geometry—and predicting the location of the next buried deposit is almost impossible.”
The man stopped digging in his yard. Instead, he cut through the floor of his house, which he was renting, and dug to about thirty feet, carting out ore at night. Zanga Muteba, a baker who then lived in Kasulo, told me, “All of us, at that time, we knew nothing.” But one evening he and some neighbors heard telltale clanging noises coming from the man’s house. Rushing inside, they discovered that the man had carved out a series of underground galleries, following the vein of cobalt as it meandered under his neighbors’ houses. When the man’s landlord got wind of these modifications, they had an argument, and the man fled. “He had already made a lot of money,” Muteba told me. Judging from the amount of ore the man had dug out, he had probably made more than ten thousand dollars—in Congo, a small fortune. According to the World Bank, in 2018 three-quarters of the country’s population lived on less than two dollars a day.
Hundreds of people in Kasulo “began digging in their own plots,” Muteba said. The mayor warned, “You’re going to destroy the neighborhood!” But, Muteba said, “it was complicated for people to accept the mayor’s request.” Muteba had a thriving bakery and didn’t have time to dig, but most locals were desperate. In Congo, more than eighty-five per cent of people work informally, in precarious jobs that pay little, and the cost of living is remarkably high: because the country’s infrastructure has been ravaged by decades of dictatorship, civil war, and corruption, there is little agriculture, and food and other basic goods are often imported. For many Kasulo residents, the prospect of a personal cobalt mine was worth any risk.
About a month after the man who discovered the cobalt vanished, the local municipality formally restricted digging for minerals in Kasulo. According to Muteba, residents implored the mayor: “We used to mine in the bush, in the forest. You stopped us. You gave all the city to big industrial companies. Now we discovered minerals in our own plots of land, which belonged to our ancestors. And now you want to stop us? No, that is not going to work.” Muteba recalled, “People started to throw rocks at the mayor, and the mayor ran away. And, when the mayor fled, the digging really started.”
Odilon Kajumba Kilanga is a creuseur who has worked in the Kolwezi area for fifteen years. He grew up in southern Congo’s largest city, Lubumbashi, which is near the Zambian border, and as a teen-ager he worked odd jobs, including selling tires by the roadside. One day when he was eighteen, a friend who had moved to Kolwezi called him and urged him to join a coöperative of creuseurs which roamed from mine to mine, sharing profits. “There were good sites that you could just turn up to and work,” Kajumba said, when we met in Kolwezi.
In those days, it took eight hours to get from Lubumbashi to Kolwezi by bus, on a rutted two-lane road. The thickets on either side of the highway crawled with outlaws, who occasionally hijacked vehicles using weapons they’d leased from impoverished soldiers. Once, bandits stopped a bus and ordered the passengers to strip; the hijackers took everything, even people’s underwear.
Kajumba knew that the journey to Kolwezi was dangerous, but he said of the creuseurs, “If they tell you to come, you come.” At first, the work, though strenuous, was exciting; he began each shift dreaming of riches. He had some stretches of good luck, but he never made the big score that would transform his life. Now in his mid-thirties, he is a laconic man who becomes animated only when he is discussing God or his favorite soccer team, TP Mazembe. Mining no longer holds romance for him; he sees the work as a symptom of his poverty rather than as a path out of it. When you are a creuseur, he said, you are “obliged to do what you can to make ends meet,” and this necessity trumps any fears about personal safety. “To be scared, you must first have means,” he said.
Kajumba joined the mining economy relatively late in life. In Kolwezi, children as young as three learn to pick out the purest ore from rock slabs. Soon enough, they are lugging ore for adult creuseurs. Teen-age boys often work perilous shifts navigating rickety shafts. Near large mines, the prostitution of women and young girls is pervasive. Other women wash raw mining material, which is often full of toxic metals and, in some cases, mildly radioactive. If a pregnant woman works with such heavy metals as cobalt, it can increase her chances of having a stillbirth or a child with birth defects. According to a recent study in The Lancet, women in southern Congo “had metal concentrations that are among the highest ever reported for pregnant women.” The study also found a strong link between fathers who worked with mining chemicals and fetal abnormalities in their children, noting that “paternal occupational mining exposure was the factor most strongly associated with birth defects.”
This year, cobalt prices have jumped some forty per cent, to more than twenty dollars a pound. The lure of mineral riches in a country as poor as Congo provides irresistible temptation for politicians and officials to steal and cheat. Soldiers who have been posted to Kolwezi during periods of unrest have been known to lay down their Kalashnikovs at night and enter the mines. At a meeting of investors in 2019, Simon Tuma Waku, then the president of the Chamber of Mines in Congo, used the language of a gold rush: “Cobalt—it makes you dream.”
After Kasulo’s mayor fled, many residents began tearing away at the ground beneath them. Some wealthier locals hired creuseurs to dig under their houses, with an agreement to split the profits. Two teams of creuseurs could each work twelve-hour shifts, chipping at the rock with hammers and chisels. A pastor and his congregation began digging under their church, stopping only for Sunday services.
By the end of 2014, two thousand creuseurs were working in the neighborhood, with little regulation. Kajumba and his coöperative soon joined in the hunt for minerals. One man on Kajumba’s team, Yannick Mputu, remembers this period as “the good times.” He told me, “There was a lot of money, and everybody was able to make some. The minerals were close to the surface, and they could be mined without digging deep holes.”
But the conditions quickly became dangerous. Not long after the mayor formally prohibited excavating for minerals, a mine shaft collapsed, killing five miners. Still, people kept digging, and by the time researchers for Amnesty International visited, less than a year after the discovery of cobalt in Kasulo, some of the holes made by creuseurs were a hundred feet deep. Once diggers reached seams of ore, they followed the mineral through the soil, often without building supports for their tunnels. As Murray Hitzman, the former U.S.G.S. scientist, pointed out, the heterogenite closest to the surface often contains the least cobalt, because of weathering. Creuseurs in Kasulo were risking their lives to obtain some of the worst ore.
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One of Kajumba’s teammates told me that their coöperative of six used to regularly extract two tons of raw material from a single pit in Kasulo. But most of the best sites were quickly excavated, and the yield from newer pits was less than half as much. The team was also ripped off by unscrupulous traders and corrupt officials. Kajumba said that lately he has struggled to pay his rent of twenty-five dollars a month. “Whenever we dig up a few tons, I send some money to my family,” he added.