Day 104: “Emergency! Emergency!” Paramedic Van

emergency_emergency
Image credit: Wishbook’s “1979.xx.xx Sears Christmas Catalog P597”

This was one of those bizarre toys that is right out of something from an early John Waters film , or even Infocult.The whole idea of this toy is macabre, you have to get the dying patient to the hospital ASAP. And the equipment in the ambulance is remarkably realistic looking, you can actually identify the blood transfusion equipment, hypodermics, and oxygen mask in the ad above—the whole thing was pretty insane in retrospect. I’m surprised I wasn’t running I.V.s on my younger sister or setting a tourniquet on the family dog Thurman.

It reminds me of this scene from John Waters’ Female Trouble (you have to go to 3:06 for the Taffy’s trauma scene, but it is worth it 🙂 )

Posted in 1102xmaS | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Nobody yardsales like the bava. NOBODY!

Picked up four vintage Shazam! glasses from 1976 at a yard sale this morning.  These will no doubt replace the special china we are currently deploying for our bava dinner parties. I love it when the nostalgia I furiously feed online materializes in the real world.

Posted in fun | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Day 105: Tomy’s Digital Derby

digital_derbyDuring the late 70s the handheld “digital” games began to make their way onto the market in force. These were some of my favorite games, and they were the portable version of the Atari 2600—which all this is leading to of course! My first game in this category was Tomy’s Digital Derby, and I remember the small portable interface was just as good, if not better, than the game. Between the racetrack design, the gears and the small steering wheel controller, it was an arcade game in miniature, and while a radically different scale of micro-technology than what we have now, the idea of a portable video game you didn’t have to hook up to your furniture like TV was profound for a seven year old kid.

And Digital Derby was just one of an assortment of games of this type, we also had Hit ‘N Missile and Blip, and the Hit ‘N Missile design was certainly my favorite.  I loved the computer screen grid of Hit N Missile, and the fact that you could move the missile with your ship to nail alien spaceships, aa feature which defies all physics. And the analog score keeper was a special touch.

What’s amazing about these toys, and I highly recommend you take a look at the YouTube videos below, was how load they were. It was “digital” run my a small battery powered motor inside, and the sound of the game is a key component for the experience, and of course YouTube abides and provides.

Digital Derby

Hit ‘N Missile (I love the kid’s accent who is playing this)

Blip:

Image credit: Wishbook’s “1980.xx.xx Sears Christmas Catalog P662”

Posted in 1102xmaS | Tagged , , , , , | 8 Comments

Day 106: Fisher Price Play Family Castle

fp_play_family_castleAny kid that had a pulse during the 70s in the US would certainly remember this gem of a toy, in fact one of the great Little People play sets of their golden age in the 70s, but just one of them. I’m inclined to say the greatest, but I have a few more Little People sets to work through before Christmas, so I have to be careful. That said, the Castle is a model for imaginative design and creating a toy that was in many ways magical for those spaces you couldn’t necessarily access or see. For example, the dungeon in the front-right tower (pictured below) was part of this set I played with for hours on end, and it’s connection to the alligator in the moat—which was nothing more than a matte-like sticker—was for me the most frightening and exciting part of the toy.

fp_castle_descGranted this was a 1974 toy and I was probably four or five when I first played with it in earnest, but what I remember was how much the castle was like my family’s big old house. All sorts of unexpected nooks and crannies that your characters could get lost in, like the secret hiding space behind the stone stairs in the foyer/entrance. And while the Weebles Haunted House—another magic design I will certainly discuss in the future—did something similar with the secret space behind the wall mirror, it was nowhere near as perfect as the Family Castle.

Finally, the Dragon’s Lair beneath the Castle (or on the side at the bottom) was cool, I was not as crazy about the Dragon as most were, I was all about the Knight figure, who was most definitely my favorite Little People figure of all-time.

Picture 7The alligator in the moat which was covered up by the drawbridge was one of my favorite elements of this set. Not to mention the tower dungeon with a movable cell door.

Picture 5

Another feature that can’t be underestimated was the hiding spot behind the staircase. The genius of this playset was all about the crazy hiding spots and all the nooks and crannies you couldn’t see, not unlike an old house.

Picture 10

The Dragon’s Lair, with yet more cool floor/matte stickers for effect as well as a yellow door into the Castle.  Also, you’ll notice the sticker of the very classic painting of  the Knight and dragon.  I should have been a toy designer in the 70s, what a cool it job it must have been.

Picture 9Even more than that, the knight figure from this play set was my all-time favorite Little People character.

Image credit: Wishbook’s “1976.xx.xx JCPenney Christmas Catalog P356”

Posted in 1102xmaS | Tagged , , , , | 13 Comments

Meming Whitman: Naked > Books

Ya never know what you’re gonna get when you do an experiment like Looking for Whitman, but as this thing heats up I have to say I a getting more and more excited. Joe D who is either from Camden or CUNY is an absolute nut, and I love it. He immediately introduces the playful into his blog, and beautifully marries the thoughtful and funny elements of Whitman. What’s more, he does it in the new verse of the online world (which is exactly what Whitman would have yawp’d for!). It seems as if the misspelled and cartoon metaphors that have emerged from LOL culture graft upon Whitman quite well, opening up some brilliant figures for tracing what still remains remarkable and shocking about Whitman’s work—it’s irreverence of form and foregrounding of the body 🙂 The image below is from Joe D.’s post “What’s the story?”
What I learned in class today

I may be wrong, but isn’t he re-translating a New Yorker cartoon into LOL language? Offering another layer to the interpretation of the drawing , at once less literary and New Yorker-like (read that as stuffy and lame) and more fluid, real, and ridiculous.  He’s not winking to the keyed in reader that gets the quote and can join in on the laugh. He is simultaneously mocking that sense of exclusion and opening up the insanity of Whitman to everyone, a kind of comic democratization of this poet—a meming if you will.

What’s more, and there is more, is that his previous post quickly and brilliantly set up the parameters for a game that can be played by all the Whitman classes. In short, he’ll identify a word from the reading he didn’t understand, but rather than looking it up, he will create an image of what he thinks the word meant as he read it.  For example, when he read the terms ““mullein & pokeweed” from “Song of Myself” he created an image of what he thought it meant, and then opened up the comments for someone to tell him what it really means. The student with the most correct responses will get a plate of cookies by the end of the semester. He is calling this “The Wrong idea Contest,” and you can see the first installment here—genius! Making something you don’t know both fun, participatory, and creative—if this is how the Looking for Whitman class is going to be, I’m even more blown away than I was originally. What if the students start meming Whitman? How relevant, appropriate and absolutely sick would that be? In fact, between Whitman the Barbarian and the “Whitman sez: Naked > Books” I think we might be  witnessing the bleeding of the online cultural language into the classroom, or even blurring some of those rigid distinctions, and what better catalyst than Whitman? You bring the fun back into a distributed classroom, and you captures so much of what is lost in the fully online, LMS imprisoned spaces, you introduce the interstitial spaces of inflection, silliness, and one’s personality. OMFG!

Posted in Looking for Whitman | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Day 107: Playskool McDonald’s Set

playskool_mcdonalds

While the liberal media has killed the beauty that is McDonald’s over the last decade, I remember a day during the 1970s when McDonald’s wasn’t poisoning the underclass and undermining all that is good and right about the unaffordable organic food movement. McDonald’s will never simply be just another chain burger joint, McDonald’s was a “familiar place” to use Playskool’s advertising of this series of toys in the early 70s that included Texaco, Holiday Inn, and McDonald’s. Of the three, the McDonald’s set was the only one worth having, and it was one of the most memorable toys of the 70s. Not only was it a place I was intimately familiar with as a kid (our family ate there more than a few times a week—and it was a sit down meal with all 8 of us), but the fact was remarkably re-enforced by the design of the toy. The restrooms were uncannily like the one’s at our local McDonald’s, and the whole thing just seemed so intimately familiar that I could play out our family adventures from that very evening with a few block-headed figures.

Although, in truth, the genius of this toy was the dinging cash register and the elaborate tray system. Not only did the trays fit between a character’s chin and chest so they could carry them around. But there was a kind of tray sliding system that allowed you to move them throughout the kitchen area, and even place used trays into a depository in the side of the restaurant. It was one of the most compelling designs of a toy that I can recall from my childhood, and the “familiar places” theme that Playskool used was both insidious and fascinating all at once. I loved this toy, and the triangle hat-wearing blockhead characters always struck me as unique, but the larger fact is that the whole toy was actually as functional and efficient as McDonald’s—which is why I still love them both.

And if you’ll excuse me, I have to go and bid on this set over at Ebay, which, by the way, offers some wonderful images with brilliant detail of the very elements that intrigued me so as a kid.

The restrooms were true-to-life!

101_0388

The cash register that dings and the trays, which were my favorite part of this set,
they fit cleanly between the blockhead characters’ chin and chest

101_0394

A drive-thru McDonald’s in a 1974 play set

101_0389

The Tray Return was my favorite part of the set, it was so streamlined, just like McDonald’s

101_0396

Posted in 1102xmaS | Tagged , , , | 12 Comments

Whitman the Barbarian: Poetry on Steroids

Sam Kreig, a student from the Digital Whitman course at UMW, took a Flip cam after class Tuesday evening, and what he did with that little camera is as bava-worthy as a video can be. This is my kind of Looking for Whitman project, a mashup of Conan the Barbarian and Walt Whitman. It’s nothing short of magic!

Posted in Looking for Whitman | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

STEMmEd Workshop

Image of STEMed Poster
Next week I’ll be heading to Puerto Rico to run a workshop with one of my favorite bloggers, and an early WPMu education maverick, Mario A. Núñez. I’m going to use the occasion to really conceptualize the syndication bus more clearly both using and apart from WPMu in an attempt to start framing out a way to make the re-publishing and feed-filtering syndication that much more seamless. The idea has come a long way over the last two years, and I think it may benefit from more distributed experiments like the ones we are doing over at UMW Blogs and Looking for Whitman. Before I hed out to Puerto Rico, I am going to draft a larger idea for a grant between schools here in Virginia as well as Puerto Rico using the bus in an attempt to get folks thinking about the possibility as well as trying to secure some funding for further design and experimentation with such a model. Particularly so that we can begin to bring the group of developers and experimenters at all the different campuses like Baruch, the MacCaulay Honors College, the CUNY Grad Center, UBC, U Calgary, etc. under some kind of funded fold. We’ll see, and when I write it I hope to get some serious and harsh feedback from all you maniacs.

In the meantime I have to thank Antonio Vantaggiato and Doribel Rodriguez from the Universidad del Sagrado CorazĂłn, who we were lucky enough to have come and visit UMW a few weeks ago, for inviting me down to think in earnest about the possibility of one such model for distributed teaching and learning.

What’s more, they even made a cool poster for the event, as you can see above! 🙂

Posted in presentations, wordpress multi-user, wpmu | 5 Comments

Day 108: Starship Enterprise

enterprise

enterrpise_desc

Image credit: Wishbook’s “1976.xx.xx Sears Christmas Catalog (Canada) P246”

In the 70s I was forced-fed the Star Trek re-runs as a child, and I probably saw the entire series, though I don;t remember much of it.  In fact, I was never really a big fan of the series at all and I’m still not, and when gien the chance to choose between Twilight Zone and Star Trek as a kid Star Trek never won. But it was unavoidable, but rather than enjoying the characters and plots—I was much more into the transporters, communicators, and laser guns.  And the Starship Enterprise flight deck toy was a work of design genius in this regard.  The whole box frame was brilliant, and the spinning transporting room which hid your figures was a perfect touch. Moreover, the moveable screen that simulated flight blew me away as a kid. Unlike the Halls of Justice for the DC Supershero figures, the Enterprise was worth the $20.00 at the time, which was a small fortune.

Posted in 1102xmaS | Tagged , , , | 11 Comments

Beginning of the Semester Traffic

Well, we are actually in the third week of classes here at UMW, amazing how fast it is going, especially since  we are literally crushed with activity and uptake of UMW Blogs. It has been a banner semester with almost 50 courses and over 35 different professors using the system is some fashion or another this semester alone. It’s amazing that we’re three weeks in and I am still jam packed with visiting courses and giving an overview of the system. It’s fun to see things light up like this, and at the same time a little tough because what was once a system I could in some ways maintain and “control” has gotten out of my hands. The RSS feed moves so furiously that I can’t even begin to catch up, and I’m feeling a bit estranged from the joy of the whole experiment, reading widely and commenting  often. I know I’ll find my pace once things slow down for me, but I’m on edge just thinking about how much I’m missing already. I know you can’t consume it all, but damn it if you don’t make the Herculean effort necessary to keep the community solid.

BuddyPress running on UMW Blogs but we are still treating it very much experimental, using it mainly using it predominantly for blog and member directories—though not preventing anyone from toying around with the profiles, messaging, groups, etc. We haven’t entirely themed the BuddyPress integration yet, but you can get a sense of Martha’s brilliant styling here. And if you haven’t seen the site re-design on the frontpage, you should really take a look, Martha  is amazing.

umwblogs_stats
UMW Blogs Stats for the first 2 weeks of the semester

What struck me this evening when I checked in on the first two weeks stats for UMW Blogs is what an insane amount of traffic the site has gotten since August 24th. Over 51,000 visits, almost 36,000 of them unique, and more than 150,000 page views! Now, these numbers are particularly startling given that we have just over 3500 users, all of whom are definitely not active. What these figures suggest to me is that UMW Blogs is getting an immense amount of traffic from people who are not part of our community. Unlike last year, more than 74%  of our traffic is from search sites and referring sites. What we have here is an open ecosystem of thinking, teaching and learning that people are accessing regularly, and en masse, through web searches and referral links. That’s wild! And while numbers lie, and I understand all that, what this tells me is that while UMW Blogs is becoming a dreaded system, it does offer some basic amenities that are key to our institution: a quick and easy place to publish media and create dynamic sites; a culture for sharing what we do and opening up the dialogue beyond the university walls; a fairly sophisticated syndication engine for aggregating together relevant content that keeps getting easier.

So rather than losing energy and getting demoralized with the tidal wave of work and projects, it is time to double up efforts and come up with a grant that spans several institutions and invests some serious time, energy, and money in working through the possibilities of fine-tuning the syndication bus.  I know it can be done, and I truly believe we are pretty close to having a proto-type that may prevent many invested universities from simply capitulating to Google Wave and the other applications that are basically doing just this. What’s important about this is that we avoid surrendering all thought, innovation, content, and control over the places that we design to mega-corporations that are in many ways alienating us from the spaces we need to be hacking. And I say this knowing full well Google is amazing at what they do, and the Google LMS is not far off. That being the case, I still firmly believe it is the people and ideas that are working through these issues at their respective institutions and individually that need to be framing the possibilities and imaginatively dialoging about the implications. What we need maybe even more than convenience is a critical perspective on the ways in which so much of our online spaces, data, and possibilities are being determined for us.

I’m unbelievably happy with what’s happened here at UMW, but there are still holes we need to figure out, and we need to start imagining that aggregation engine that doesn’t become about any one system, but rather pulls together and relates data from a plurality of services and sites using a few basic standards. So, this is my wake-up call that there is much work to still be done, and the framing of a possible grant needs to be rolled out here soon to keep things relevant and interesting as real-time RSS begins to heatup.

Posted in wordpress multi-user, wpmu | Leave a comment