Tuesday, January 27, 2009

The Annex


Here is an update with pictures of the new VCM building nearing completion on Second Life Virtual World.

Our first gallery exhibit is planned for Midterm.

The building is smaller than the originally planned 1/5 of a region but still has three floors with a ground floor Gallery, a first floor classroom that will support to 25 avatars, and a second floor learning/resource area.

On the Oceanside of the property is an interactive Work Ethics garden.



Some points of interest about the Annex

a. Building has two elevators. ( use the big round one, other elevator still working on script).

b. Has two pets, ( kitties) Tuna Breath is fully scriptable, The other kitty, Shameous is actually scripted to an artificially intelligence server (A.L.I.C.E. Robotics Technology). The cat is way too smart. Ask him anything and he will come up with an answer. If he doesn’t know the answer –answers like a politician.

c. Classroom and Resource Center has big screen internet access, Big screen PowerPoint viewers and Picture kiosk that all can be configured for programmed instruction. Books are scripted to URLs.

d. The Work Ethics Garden is touch scripted, touch a poster and it revolves and discloses more information about work ethics traits.

e. Building is located near the only inter-sims (region) subway.

Want to visit?? Here is how . . .

You will need an avatar to visit, go to http://secondlife.com/ click on Get started button. It is best to sign up from home computer. Once you are an avatar and have gone through avatar training at orientation island ( will be a zoo - think of Ellis island- don’t skip the training!!!!) The annex is at: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Stephenson/102/204/32

Our first gallery exhibit at midterm!

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

VCM Building Under Construction on Second Life Virtual World



The VCM (Visual Communications Program) has started the construction of a three-story building, nickname the ANNEX. The Annex will consist of a first floor art gallery, second floor classroom, and a third floor multi-purpose Learning Resource Center. On the campus grounds overlooking the ocean, avatars will walk to the beach through an interactive work- ethics garden.

The campus building is located on Second Life-Virtual World. Anyone can visit the Annex by simply joining Second Life with free membership (https://join.secondlife.com/) and creating an Avatar (an avatar is a computer user's representation of himself/herself or alter ego). With an avatar you can visit the campus annex at http://slurl.com/secondlife/Stephenson/102/204/32 The annex is open 24/7.

Grand opening of the facility and first art exhibit is scheduled for Midterm.

One of the reasons for VCM procuring and developing land on Second Live is the closing of Lively.com this month. Lively was a network of avatars and virtual rooms created and decorated by its users. Google launched Lively on July 8, 2008 as an experiment in providing people with more ways to express themselves on the Web. Our Virtual chat room 202 3/4 was a product of lively.

In such a short period of time, Lively grew, to thousands of cafes, bars, discos, tropical islands, treehouses, space stations, galleries, bedrooms and more. Lively's users shared their rooms with people from all over the real world, meeting and chatting with each other via their customizedavatars. As of December 31, 2008 Lively ended and because of that we are off to Second Life.


Thursday, November 20, 2008

A New Sketchup 3D, Open Source Software

You might be thinking about taking the Maya 3D course down the road or just would like to get your feet wet in 3D modeling - but your eyes drop out of your head when you see the price of 3D software!
Google’s Sketchup is a great open source alternative to explore 3d. It is very powerful yet very easy to use. You can find the download at: http://sketchup.google.com. A new and improved version 7 has just been released and is available as a free version and a professional version. Sketchup Pro will cost you some money, but the free version will get you started and by no means is it a wimp!

Download the free version,and you will be working with SketchUp in a couple of hours.
No kidding! Sketchup has dozens of video tutorials, and great help support.
Also Sketchup links to a
3D Warehouse where you can see other 3D artists work and can download objects that you might use for scenes you are creating - an Open Source culture! Also Sketchup has plug-ins that extends software functionality.

Test Driving the Free Version

Well let’s try this bad boy out! If you've been watching the construction of the new building along Hwy 75. You might be looking for more information to what the new Health Education Building is going to look like. Wouldn’t it be cool to be able to spin the building around in 3D space. . . to get an idea how it might look from a different angle, maybe walk through a virtual building or, how about posting the model on a website or interactive DVD so others might be able to view the model. This can all be accomplished with the free version of Sketchup!

To create the 3d model of the building I used the following 2D architectural rendering and the floor plan.





The artistic rendering, was used to capture the brick texture as a "texture map" that is attached to the walls of the model as a material. (I could of used a photograph of bricks and windows and could of got even more realism).
The 2D floor plan was scanned and imported into Sketchup. and was used as a guide to create the walls in 3D. You can see the walls in the photo below seem to rise up from the floor plan. Using the floor plan as a template keeps the building in the proper perspective and size.









Go ahead, click and drag on the building below with your mouse and drag to spin the building around in 3d

When you click on the building the mouse cursor changes to a two headed arrow. Click and drag and you can spin the building around. Pretty cool stuff. All created from just a floor plan and an artist rendering and the free version of Sketchup!

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Cool Web Resources










NWCET put together some great Web Resources and they are listed below. Some of the links below you have seen in our web classes but here is a comprehensive list of Web resources, that will be very useful!

The National Workforce Center for Emerging Technologies (NWCET) is an NSF Advanced Technology Education Center in Information Technology located in Bellevue, Washington, http://www.nwcet.org/.

The following websites provide a full range of free instructional content on web design and related topics. Exploring these sites is a great way to extend your knowledge as you work on advanced web development. Enjoy!

Instruction/Tutorials


W3 Schools
HTML Dog
WDG Guide to HTML
sitepoint.com
Yale Web Style Guide
Web Page Design for Designers
CoolHomePages.com
PageResource.com
Colormatters.com
WebDesign at About.com (+web design tips)
Design Tips, Tutorials and Tricks (175+ links)
WebMonkey


CSS Resources

WDG Guide to Cascading Style Sheets
WDG List of CSS Properties
CSS Zen Garden
Web Design Group (WDG): Linking Style Sheets to HTML
Listamatic2 (sample stylized lists)
Alascreations CSS menus gallery


Technical Specifications

HTML 4.01 Specification
CSS 2 Specification
CSS2 Properties Index
XML 1.0 Specification
XHTML 1.0 Specification


Usability and Accessibility

Usability 101, by Jakob Nielsen
Jakob Nielsen:
Ten Usability Heuristics
Designing a Web Site for Yale University Library
AskTOG: First Principles of Interaction Design
Web Pages That Suck
AccessIT - includes a searchable Knowledge Base of accessible technology questions and answers
AccessIT Accessible University Mock Site - example pages that demonstrate common web accessibility problems and solutions
Videos from DO-IT
WebAIM - articles and tutorials on all aspects of accessible web design
Color
Color Displays, from Web Style Guide
Browser-safe colors, from Web Style Guide
Dithering, from Web Style Guide
WebAIM on Color Blindness
Wellstyled Color Scheme Generator
VisiBone.com
VisiBone Color Chart
Visibone Webmaster's Color Lab
Colorjack.com

Graphics & Copyright


"Graphics and Accessibility," Yale University Web Style Guide, 2nd edition
What is copyright?
Cyberbee Interactive Copyright Questions and Answers
10 Big Myths about copyright explained
Stanford University Copyright and Fair Use Overview
United States Copyright Office - Copyright Basics
"Resolution," Web Style Guide, 2nd Edition
"Graphics and Network Bandwidth," Web Style Guide, 2nd Edition
sitepoint.com: GIF, JPG, and PNG - What's the difference?
Webmonkey:
Optimizi$ Your Images
caddpower.com: Cropping Photos

Validators

W3C HTML Validator
W3C CSS Validator
Functional Accessibility Evaluator (FAE)
WAVE Web Accessibility Tool
AIS Web Accessibility Toolbar
Watchfire WebXACT (formerly "Bobby", the first tool of its kind)
Cynthia Says

Monday, September 15, 2008


Mr Hart, sent me an email the other day about an upcoming event that you may be in interested. The 2008-2009 Yellow Pages Association (YPA) Advertising Challenge. Advertising Challenge winners and their faculty sponsors will share in nearly $10,000 in total prize awards. Beyond providing valuable experience and monetary prizes, the advertising challenge is designed to reward and showcase excellence in student-created advertising. Winners will have their work displayed on the YPA Academic web site and their work will be honored at the YPA Annual Convention.

This Year's Client
U-Store-It, a leader in self-storage, has agreed to serve as this year's client.

The Assignment
Students entering the 2008-2009 advertising challenge will create two Yellow Pages print ads and one Internet Yellow Pages ad for U-Store-It, who will also play a significant role in the competition judging. Students can work alone or in teams of up to three, under the supervision of a faculty advisor. Multiple teams can enter from the same class or school and the entry can be the result of an in-class assignment, if desired. All entries are due by April 24, 2009.

You can download the case study by clicking on this link: Download case study. You can obtain all of the competition materials after they complete the free registration at the Advertising Challenge Registration section of the advertising challenge web site.

Prize awards will be distributed as follows:
  • 1st Place:$2,500 to winning team; $750 to faculty sponsor
  • 2nd Place:$1,500 to winning team; $500 to faculty sponsor
  • 3rd Place:$750 to winning team; $350 to faculty sponsor
  • Honorable Mentions (up to 3): $300 to winning team; $200 to faculty sponsor
Beyond monetary prizes, entry and success in the advertising challenge can help students beef-up their resumes. All winners will receive a personal letter of commendation from Neg Norton, President, YPA.

Easy to participate
All support materials available online from Yellow Pages.
They have developed a detailed case study, which in addition to the client and competition briefing, contains examples of U-Store-It's and competitor's ads as well as other materials to minimize your work while at the same time improving your chances of developing a winning entry. Visit the website for more info. If you are in interested let me know.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Zep, the avatar!

Zep resides on Second Life, a virtual world. Avatars are controlled by carbon-based flesh and blood people (in this case me). Using my mouse and keyboard I can make Zep fly, teleport ( tp. move around any place in the world instantly), talk, dance, drive a car, fly a plane or simulate most kinds of RL (real life). The carbon-based (me) entity owns virtual land on the mainland where I have a virtual studio building and cottage that Zep calls home.




Zep has a pet cat named Seamus that resides in the studio. Seamus is not an avatar. Seamus is an object. For Seamus to be an avatar, the little bundle of joy would require a carbon-based (another person and another computer) to move him around the VR. Seamus, being an object doesn't do much, kind of hangs around and appears to sleep all day (kind alike a real cat). He appears to move because he is made of flexible objects. Zep had to construct the cat, the studio building, and many of the items on the property with primitive 3d objects called prims. The 3d software to build objects with prims is contained within the world. So you do not need any other software. . . but it can help.


Not all avatars have the creativity or like to build things. Some objects in SL are available for sale and you buy them with Lindens, the currency of SL. Lindens can be converted to US dollars. Let me repeat that - Lindens can be converted to US dollars. So in other words, life goes on in SL and goods and services are bought and sold with a cash equivalent on a world that only exists on a segment of a hard drive.


Personally, the carbon-based part of Zep is not interested in spending too much time living life in a virtual world. But, I found that I really LIKE to build stuff on virtual worlds, and I could get paid for doing so! I became familiar with SL from freelance work that I accepted from a business man who was creating a presence on SL. Through this freelance work, I became aware that there are emerging opportunities for graphic designers. Keep in mind that every tree and flower, building, clothes, hair - every object must be built by an avatar backed-up by a "carbon-based creative person". There are millions of avatars that have joined SL and over a million avatars have visited SL in the last 60 days. Avatars need stuff!


Second Life is one of many, many, virtual worlds. If you visit Virtual World Review.com you can get an idea of the explosive growth of VR-Virtual Reality-worlds. There are hundreds of virtual worlds in development and more coming. Check out this website and look at the link Market Research at Virtual Worlds News.com. With the advent of VR and other social networking phenomenon (FaceBook and MySpace) there is a lot of interest in investment in VR. Money, marketing, advertising and training equates to opportunities for digital artists, 3d modelers, and animators like yourselves! It is in your best interest to learn about VR's, because it is possible that a job in your near future may very well require it!


As you can see from the image on the right, much of the graphic design isn't for the faint-hearted. This image shows a texture map for a Zep avatar 3d model (think wire frame). Realistic texture maps are required in SL and other VRs because with the present technology SL can only work with Prims or primitive surfaces like cubes and spheres and not complex 3d models. Many students of Maya 3d may be turned-off and frustrated by the crude toolset that is required for use in internet VR's like SL. In other words to model for internet VR you have to have a very refined skill set for texture mapping but be able to dumb objects models down to create realism with primitive objects. That's a challenge for creatives and there is a learning curve to doing it well!


So you might have heard the buzz about a "get out of jail free card " ( NMTC VCM extra-credit opportunity). You can earn actually two cards that are redeemable in any of my classes. One card for joining SL and a second card for going through the training, building some objects in a
sandbox, rezzing them and taking a snapshot. I am not interested in your travels and experiences in SL. I am interested in what you build. If you want to join another VR instead of SL that would be OK too. The only requirement is that you pick a VR World that allows you to build prims.
The catch is that you must do your virtual world experience off-campus. Unfortunately, most virtual worlds are blocked by WebSense as "gaming" and gaming is blocked on campus. We are working to get it unblocked, but we are still in the process.

If you haven't experienced a virtual world and want to get an idea of what they are like before you commit a major time investment, visit the Lively VR room below. You will have to login and download a client, create an avatar but this VR is by Google and simple to do. Go ahead bang around the room, move furniture, add furniture you won't hurt anything. Give it a try, have fun!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Dead broke and not a dime to buy software?

I have heard several students comment on how nice it would be to have Creative Suites at home. But for many of broke students getting the $600 for the student version of CS or the $1800 for the professional version of CS is only a dream. The price of books, tuition and gas for the car takes up their ready cash reserve. So what can a student do? While you are saving your pennies for that day you can purchase your own version of CS you may want to consider Open Source software.

What if you could create vector graphics with software like Illustrator at home for free! What if you could create raster graphics with software like PhotoShop at home for free! How about pagination at home with software like InDesign for free! How about audio production and video production at home for free! Too good to be true? No, it is possible!

It is possible with Open Source software. It's available Now. It's Free and there is no catch to use it. In fact you can even give away copies to your friends!

Recently, in the Intro to Computer Graphics Course I have adapted open source software where students will have hands-on assignments and work concurrently with Creative Suites. Students create artwork with both sets of software. So if you have overheard a VCM students talking about InkScape, Gimp and Scribus and you don't know what they are talking about, here is a heads up!

Free download

You might think about downloading these software titles to your home computer. All you need to do is click on the links below and you can visit the software websites where you will find training and the free download page. But if you are unsure and want to try the software first, you can try open source software in VCM Lab Room 202. Just go to the start menu /programs menu, then look for a menu item Open Source. I would like you to try three software titles Gimp, InkScape and Scribus.


GIMP is the GNU Image Manipulation Program. It is a freely distributed piece of software for such tasks as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring. Yes you guessed it, a lot like PhotoShop.


Inkscape has many of the capabilities of Illustrator and supports many advanced SVG features (markers, clones, alpha blending, etc.). Great care is taken in designing a streamlined interface. It is very easy to edit nodes, perform complex path operations, trace bitmaps and much more.


Scribus is an open-source program that brings award-winning professional page layout to Linux/Unix, MacOS X, OS/2 and Windows desktops with a combination of "press-ready" output and new approaches to page layout. Underneath the modern and user friendly interface, Scribus supports professional publishing features, such as CMYK color, separations, ICC color management and versatile PDF creation.


What is open source software?

So what is "open source software"? Paraphrasing from Wikipedia), OSS or open source software began as a marketing campaign for free software or software libre. OSS can be used, studied, and modified without restriction. It can be copied and redistributed in modified or unmodified form only to ensure that further recipients can also do these things. In other words it must stay free!

In practice, for software to be distributed as free software, the human-readable form of the program must be made available to the recipient along with a notice granting the above permissions. Such a notice is a free software license.

The free software movement was conceived in 1983 by Richard Stallman to make these freedoms available to every computer user. Free software is distinct from "freeware" which is proprietary software available free of charge. Users usually cannot study, modify, or redistribute freeware as you can with OSS.

Since free software (OSS) may be freely redistributed, it generally is available at no cost, and it's OK to give the OSS software to your friends or other students. Free software business models are usually based on adding value such as support, training, customization, integration, or certification. So you might download some OSS, and find that you can buy a super deluxe Pro version of the same software for a bit more money.

So do people using this free software think it is any good?

Well to answer that question a report by the Standish Group says that adoption of OSS has caused a drop in revenue to the proprietary software industry by about $60 billion per year. So people are definitely taking advantage of free software!

But to give you an idea of what open source software is available, one of my favorite websites is SourceForge.NET . You will find it all here free - downloads of database software, enterprise software, games and multimedia software to name a few.