Riddle me this Batman …

Why should you buy a PC? Having read the late-breaking news that the MAC intels can, indeed, run Windows XP flawlessly – I can’t think of one …

The Riddler from Batman

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Universities not ready for open source?

Insidehighered.com quotes a recent study (conducted by the Alliance for Higher Education Competitiveness) that finds Universities are not ready for open source! Interesting read for thinking about precisely why this might be the case …

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Slide Show Pro

Image of Slide Show pro logoIn my efforts to find an easy, versatile, and professional looking solution for presenting images as a slideshow online, I came across SlideShowPro – an extension for Macromedia’s newer Flash authoring programs, such as Flash MX Professional or Flash 8. And while this solution is not a freebie (the cost of the Flash software plus 20 bucks for the extension), you get a whole lot more than you pay for with this extension.

Here are a couple of examples that feature this extension:

The basic logic behind this plugin is that it allows you to create a flash movie that acts as a container for information about your slide show images. However, to improve the speed and versatility of the movie, the flash file is simply a receptacle for a XML document that organizes the albums of photos that live outside the flash movie. In other words, the flash movie (SWF file) is reading a XML file that organizes the images and can be easily updated and changed – so you don’t have to recreate the swf file to add images, albums, etc. Moreover, the extension also allows you to fetch your flickr albums with an OPML file, play music with your slideshow, and insert FLV movie files …

This is perfect for some of the projects I am currently involved in, and I will be playing with this a lot more in the days to come. In fact, I already have an example that works with typo3 – check out this page for a test run with slideshowpro …

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Laptop University

The following article on Slashdot is from an IT person (I assume) at an Art College who is asking for advice about dealing with his colleges pending move to an entirely laptop campus … interesting concept!

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If you build it, they will come …

While I hated the film Field of Dreams (almost as much as I hate the acting persona of Kevin Costner), I will shamelessly utilize an oft abused quote from that film. After speaking with Amanda McCuskey (a sophomore at UMW, and one of the University’s finest), I was made aware of some online communities that UMW students partake in outside of the ubiquitous facebook. There is a community of UMWers on livejournal called Mary Wash that have been using this social software to communicate amongst themselves and, quite interestingly, with those high school students that are considering coming to the university.

In fact, the this year’s incoming class of freshman (2009) used the bulletin board feature on livejournal to post musings, schedules, proposals, advice and support as they embark on their new life in college. (Please note: that this is a student run site and you may not always be excited about the content!) Moreover, the lists are moderated by the students themselves which implies that these communities are self-sustaining, designed to vent about the college experience as well as foster a space to both find and provide help for one another. Now, here is a public social software tool that allows studnts to create communities before they even step foot on campus, pretty cool, no?

And while I am not a particular fan of livejournal’s software, it seems highly effective at creating a space where students can create effective social networks. For example, the Mary Wash community has well over 200 members, and while you have to be a member to post and keep a journal (their term for blogging), anyone can coment on the post or signup as readers (there are another 215 of them). Students also have the option to control who views their journals, building in a layer of privacy and protection. While in the back of my mind I knew these networks existed for many purposes outside of the mission of DTLT, there are also many uses that fall well within the realm of the academic community.

Image of a livejournal Site created by UMW students

Yet, I think knowing that the students are putting this social software to good use by cultivating a community of information sharing suggests the ways in which these tools are shaping many students social experience at UMW. Such a fact parallels the mission of DTLT, making a strong case for bringing similar tools into a more specific context for their academic experience at UMW. And while I am not suggesting this as an opportunity for coopting these pre-exisitng communities (for they serve a unique purpose outside of DTLT’s purview), I do believe that these elements of online social networks can be easily framed and adopted for many students into a more rigorous, academic online experience which, in my mind, is ripe for development and exploration. In fact, that is what we’re all doing here at DTLT, but I find it really exciting to know/remember that we are by no means alone in this! The students are not only the reason we are here, but, moreover, our most useful resource for understanding what these communities offer and why they keep them alive. So, as a revsion of my original title I offer up: “They’re all ready here! We just have to build it …”

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The MoAD’s Virtual Museums

Image from the Museum of the African DiasporaThe Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD) in San Francisco has one of the most elegant and important exhibits I have yet to see online. The “Photographs from the African Diaspora” virtual exhibit is truly visionary, be sure to take a look.

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Preserving the Past with Futuristic Tools

One of the projects that I have been working on this semester has been the development of an online exhibit with the museum lab class in the Historic Preservation department. As this project builds momentum, I am starting to get really excited about the work already done as well as the herculean tasks that still lie ahead. Thus far the students have uploaded over 100 images to their image gallery, which represent each of the ten decades of UMW’s 100 year history. It has has been a treat, thus far, to see this online archive of UMW’s past coalesce into the beginnings of a pictorial narrative. And while the class presently remains hard at work both scanning images and creating an “On-the Wall” exhibit, I am beginning to ramp up a content management system that will allow them to frame their images and text into an organized, cohesive and flexible format for course’s virtual museum.

Image of Ball Hall at UMWTo accomplish this I am planning on designing a site with typo3. This open-source CMS is by no means simple to work with ( a fact readily acknowledged by anyone working with this program), but it does provide an amazing amount of flexibility that has been luring me in for some time now. I have made some pretty significant strides in template design and implementation over the last couple of months (by far the most difficult tasks when working with typo3), and I feel comfortable enough to start documenting the process for creating templates with typo3 and setting up a system of permissions that will allow the students to use this program as a kind of “text-editor on steroids” to input the particular details of their webpages.

Continue reading

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Simpson-ized Self-Portrait …

Gardner has been on a bloggin’ tear as of late and, as usual, providing me with something fun to do online. Like, for example, the simpsomaker self-portrait machine featured below:
Self-portrait as a Simspon character

He has also invoked Martin Luther on the iTunes U question and, quite frankly, I have seen way too much of Apple’s insidious posturing recently to argue with his astute points ..

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Quotable #1

The Houston chief of police, Harold Hurtt, recently proposed placing surveillance cameras in streets, apartments, shopping malls and even private homes to fight crime. His response to reporters questions about privacy was the following quotable:

I know a lot of people are concerned about Big Brother, but my response to that is, if you are not doing anything wrong, why should you worry about it?

It alarming how the national and local levels are beginning to be of one mind on issues of public privacy, and downright scary how both make no attempt to hide their complete lack of regard for the constitution!
Read more …

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Here’s the Scoop …

Tim O’Donnell, a speech professor here at UMW, has designed (with Ross Smith at Wake Forst University) a really cool tool that enables each of their classes to interact (more precisely, debate) online. The class site is called arguendo.com, and is powered by Scoop software – when going to Scoop’s site I found the following blurb:

Scoop is a “collaborative media application”. It falls somewhere between a content management system, a web bulletin board system, and a weblog. Scoop is designed to enable your website to become a community. It empowers your visitors to be the producers of the site, contributing news and discussion, and making sure that the signal remains high.

The basic logic is that the site community is centered around a blogging engine that users post to. However, only certain users (namely administrators) automatically show up on the frontpage. Whereas student and visitors posts can be easily found via the sidebar or search tools – they only show up on the portal/homepage when they make it to the “big time” (which means they are recommended often and highly enough by their fellow users -a celebrity hook built right in!). Tim took me for a quick tour and I really liked what I saw, but now its time to dig a bit deeper in the backend and see the inner-workings …

Great stuff Tim and Ross and thanks for the lead Gardner …

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