Father

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me

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Complete the Circle

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me

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Groovy Space Suits

Planet of the Vampires: The Space Suits

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Bodega Bay

This is a work in progress, but I almost have it where I can mask everything out but the car moving. This animated GIf—even in its ghost-like state—reinforces for me what a master Hitchcock was. This scene from The Birds is like a painting. Gorgeous!

The Birds: Bodega Bay

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Creating Animated GIFs with MPEG Streamclip and GIMP

I wrote up a tutorial for creating animated GIFs with MPEG Streamclip and GIMP. I tried to focus on using totally free tools, but if you already have Photoshop (CS4) then Tom Woodward’s tutorial here will probably prove more useful to you. I’m going to try and follow this up with another tutorial on how to use masking in order to create some interesting effects with animated GIFs. You can find the tutorial on the ds106 wiki here. Feel free to edit/add to the tutorial—I’m still a novice at GIMP, and would love any and all tips.

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#ds106radio Bumper Stickers

Michael Branson Smith (@nottrivial) has been pumping out the ds106radio bumper stickers, and I can’t wait until they are real, because I am getting them all!

See all seven on his blog here. This is a perfect design assignment fro #ds106, If he doesn’t add it to the assignment bank soon, I will 🙂

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ds106radio panel at Northern Voice

Image credit; Sylvia Currie's "DS106 Radio"

This presentation was entirely unplanned, but luckily Grant Potter had the presence of mind to put together some clips to intersperse throughout. And, to be honest, I was amazed at how well the whole thing went off given the potential for it to crash and burn given the lack of preparation. What carried it was the energy in the room and of the presenters, you can here it in the recording—it is electric! I could say more, but Noise Professor nails it in his tour diary which I excerpted below:

After a short break, it’s time for our #ds106radio4life presentation, and we march in like fucking heroes, like Mardi Gras Indians, like Carnival, ushered in by the clear ringing of silver trumpets, all neon sacred rattles and flower petals and jingle bells, undoubtedly annoying the presenters and audience from the prior session, who haven’t yet vacated the room. @grantpotter and @mikhailg have #ds106radio samples playing, and the room is bubbling with energy as we launch into the presentation, some of us at the front of the room, some of us in the audience. PROTOCOL is mentioned, and I get to say a little bit about it…. the audience is with us and it is beautiful, with @scottlo closing the deal from the Japan. Afterwards there are cheers and hugs and good feelings. We exit the hall, triumphant.

Mardi Gras Indians, indeed, what a blast it was! Here is the recording:

ds106radio presentation at Northern Voice

One regret is that it seems Sylvia Currie was at this presentation and i didn’t get to talk with her (she is responsible for the image above) —what a bummer to come that far and miss

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Michael Wesch at Faculty Academy

Image Credit: Anand Rao

Our keynote presenter at Faculty Academy this year was Michael Wesch, and I have to admit I have never seen him present before. I was at ELI 2009 when he gave a keynote presentation, but the night before proved too tough for me to make his early morning keynote. So while I had seen his videos and followed his work from afar, I’d never seen him present—until about two weeks ago. And suffice it to say it was awesome! Wesch brought it, and brought it hard. He squeezed UMW’s Faculty Academy into an insanely tight travel schedule and we are ever so thankful he did—he had our president’s ear, and he framed a vision for the future of higher ed and media that resonated on all the right levels. As Guilia Forsythe noted during his talk on Twitter, “UMW should be very proud. #ds106 IS EXACTLY what @mwesch recommends re: teaching with media.” Indeed, Wesch’s talk seemed to brilliantly detail all the issues we are trying to get at in ds106, and it makes sense that both he and Gardner Campbell should loom so large in the vision of a distributed, online course that aims directly for creativity, enagagement, a sense of ownership (and wonder), as well as a critical investment in the new media that everywhere surrounds us.

Marth Burtis already used the video from his keynote at UMW as a way to introduce the vision and possibility of ds106 alongside Gardner’s “Bags of Gold” presentation at OpenEd, and I will be doing the same when my online Summer session starts up on June 20th. A big thanks to Wesch for for giving us a perfect framework to think about the work we are doing with #ds106! Now watch the video hippies (and apologies for the 30 second commercial, we are working on getting this moved over to ds106.tv).


Watch live video from umwnewmedia on Justin.tv

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A Bionic Presentation

Image credit: Martha Burtis

Tom Woodward rocking the Tweed at UMW's Faculty Academy

Readers of this blog already know I love Tom Woodward, so there need not be any confusion there. And his presentation at Faculty Academy just reinforces why: he brought his “A-game”! I like to tease presenters at UMW that thy need to bring their A-game or go home, and I am only half joking. When you come to my house, you need to step it up—that’s that. And Tom did in a big way. Not only did he use 28 random images for slides in his talk he collected on twitter the day before (see them here), but he went further by including a video he made the morning of the presentation with people in the audience. Add to that a third element of incorporating group work into the presentation, and that is a full on trifecta of madness. Three completely random elements that he managed beautifully. Bionic indeed. See his post on the talk here and check out the video ” What kind of student do you want in your classroom?” below.

UMW- What kind of student do you want in your classroom? from Tom Woodward on Vimeo.

One of the things that struck me about Tom’s presentation is that K-12 in many ways is not at a crossroads, but rather too far gone when it comes to being devoured by political and monied interests. He did everything he could to encourage folks to be hopeful and get involved, but as usual Tom refused to hide from the reality that the process of gutting the public education system is already well underway, and it would take a Herculean effort of involvement, outrage, and action to turn that tide—-something we all might be skeptical of given the state of our culture when it comes to anything regarding some kind of intervention into the interests that pull the strings on the sock puppet democracy we savor. I kind of likened Tom’s presentation to something a professor of mine at UCLA once said about Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment (even though Tom will berate me for such a high falutin’ comparison 🙂 )—“The moral quagmire opened up by this novel could by no means be contained by the anemic, plot-driven attempt to resurrect Raskolnikov at the end as a kind of Lazarus figure rising from a moral death—-you can’t go home again after reading this novel.” That moment from my undergraduate career came back to me after hearing Tom frame some possible ways to battle the current situation of K-12—and that is no knock on Tom, just like it is no knock on Dostoyevsky—the simple fact is that the problems and questions raised by the presentation are far greater than any possible solutions provided. Which highlights the power of this presentation—even if it leaves me a bit depressed as to the future of education in the US.

Note: I am working on getting the presentation up on ds106.tv, and will link to it hear once that is taken care of.

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ds106 at Faculty Academy

I figured I would interrupt the regularly scheduled animated GIFs for a few posts on some of the presentations and projects I have been part of recently. And I’ll start with the quick, lunchtime presentation Martha Burtis and I gave at Faculty Academy about ds106. This attempt to present ds106 to a group of people simply reinforced what Tim Owens already noted about this course, “to do it any justice a few days of presentations from a wide range of participants would be needed” (paraphrase)—so this is nothing if not incomplete. Nonetheless, it’s a start.

Special thanks to Andy Rush for the video and Timmmmyboy for getting this up on ds106.tv so quickly, you both rock!

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