HorizonZero is a web magazine from the Banff Centre that is beautifully implemented and shows how you can have new media and text versions of articles together.
In some sense this is what Vectors: Online journal for digital media is aiming at.
User 83211
Now what’s so special about being number 83211?
Internet Safety Day
InSafe is a Council of Europe sponsored organization promoting Internet safety information. Did you know about Safer Internet Day? One is tempted to mock such earnestness. Or you could,
Write about your journey with friends from all over the world in the exciting and sometimes dangerous cyber world of Internet and mobile technology. Take along a magical helper from the Kingdom of Internet safety.
I’m taking Alpha Dog who is good at “digging down spam”.
But seriously, what makes this site so bizarre is that it is written for children, but designed for adults. I can’t imagine any child reading pages of this stuff without any graphics and I find it hard to imagine adults reading this without cringing. Perhaps the graphical version is coming. Compare with the Canadian Media Awareness Network (MNet) to see what I mean.
Continue reading Internet Safety Day
Video Game Music Archive
The sound of play! VGMusic, or the Video Game Music Archive, claims to have over 19,000 MIDI files of game music. I suspect the reason for the MIDI is copyright. The music is organized by game platform. Here is Night Hunt for the game San Francisco Rush for the Nintendo 64.
120 Years of Electronic Music
Electronic Musical Instruments: 1870 – 1990 is a clean site devoted to electronic instruments from the musical telegraph to the Optigan (don’t ask). For each instrument or company there is a page of history and images. Beauty, eh!
mSpace: exploring the semantic web
The mSpace Classical Music Browser is a topic map browser … at least that’s what I think it is.
This is peek at the semantic web to come. In this case the topic is classical music. For more see, mSpace: exploring the New Web. (What, by the way, is the .fm namespace?)
Thanks to Chris McAllister for this link.
Sheridan Interactive Multimedia: Flash Reviews and Tutorials
Dan Zen sent me links to two neat sites put together from the work of his students in the Interactive Multimedia program. The first is a series of tutorials for Flash, Sheridan Interactive Multimedia Flash Tutorials. The second is a Flash work that gathers screen shots and short reviews of other neat Flash sites. See FlashDeck – Sheridan Interactive Multimedia Cool Flash Sites.
Vectors: Online journal for digital media
Ray Siemens pointed out to me a new journal Vectors: Journal of Culture and Technology in a Dynamic Vernacular being launched by Institute for Multimedia Literacy at the University of Southern California Annenberg Center for Communication.
In addition to creating a venue for academic research and modes of expression that go well beyond traditional text to incorporate still and moving images, sound, and interactivity, Vectors seeks to significantly redefine the parameters of scholarly publication.
The subtitle for the journal seems a strange … what is a “dynamic vernacular”? Do they mean the journal will be “interactive” in an everyday fashion?
I am excited to see a journal the recognizes the importance of publishing multimedia works, but that raises the interesting question of how they hope to mount and preserve complex interactive works. Perhaps they won’t bother trying to preserve new media work they publish and will instead focus on using the medium.
Continue reading Vectors: Online journal for digital media
Jo: Skinning Blog
TAPoR Skinning Research is a blog by a student who is doing a cool project on skinning for TAPoR. It is an example of open research and how blogging ideas can weave in people.
XML Scripting of World of Warcraft Interface
Kids are now modding the interface of WOW (World of Warcarft by Blizzard). Blizzard doesn’t support such mods, but has made it possible. See their tutorial, Tutorials – The Unofficial WoW UI Site. According to the tutorial, “The interface of World of Warcraft is built from XML files which describe the look and layout, and lua files which contain scripting functionality.”
My son tells me that it is hard to draw the line between a mod that makes it easier to play, and a hack that gives you information or an advantage you shouldn’t have.