Spreadsheet Invasion

This assignment was one of my favorites from the entire class. It also took longer than any other assignment so I want to see if I can make it easier for other people.

The first thing you want to do is open up your spreadsheet application. I used Microsoft Excel but google docs should work just as well. Next you’ll want to decide what size you want each shape to be. The smaller they are, the more precise of a picture you can create, but it will also take a lot longer. To do this, select about 70 columns or so and then click on format -> column -> width. I chose .2 to get small enough boxes for my pong game.

Now you can start making your background. Just select the cells you want to paint and click on the bucket fill tool with the color you want.

Once you have everything set up, take a screenshot. On a mac you can do this by pressing Shift/Command/4. This will turn your cursor into crosshairs and you can drag out a box over what you want to take a screenshot of. These will be put on your desktop by default. You may want to move them into their own folder as you go along.

Now comes the tedious part. You have to go through and change the cells of your project between every screenshot. On my pong project, this meant moving the pong ball and the paddles but it can be whatever you want to have animate.  Repeat this process of changing the cells and taking a screenshot afterwards until you finish the animation you want.

Next you’ll want to open up a movie editor. I used iMovie because it was so straightforward. Before you start the project in iMovie, make sure that the Ken Burns effect is OFF. Once you create the project simply select ALL of the screenshots and drag them into your project window. They should all appear as a frame and be there in order. From here all you need to do is change the duration of each frame to your liking and export.

I hope this helps!

Final Project: Left-Handed Twitter

Growing up I was really into reading books. I would read anything and everything I could get my hands on. But since coming to college and becoming a computer science major, I have turned towards web comics for stories. I think it has been mostly becasue it is far easier for me to spend a few minutes every morning checking my RSS feed for new comics than it is to sit down and read a book (It helps that I can understand most of the xkcd jokes now too). Most web comics tell very short, only vaguely related stories (With a few notable exceptions). So I love it when there are recurring characters in comics that are not Typically episodic.

I was reading left-handed toons the other day and came across a collection of all of the comics about a character named John. Every single john comic cracked me up and I always wanted to know what would happen with him next. For my final ds106 I had been thinking about trying to use twitter to tell a story. John’s story is very loosely formed and only briefly touched upon in each comic. So I figured I could and supplement his story with twitter and make it my own. I made some other accounts for other people he encounters in his adventures as well. You can find the strips I’m working off of here.

Follow John: @lefthanded_john

Follow Bill: @ShoutingBilly

Follow Stewart: @StudiousStewart

Follow Sara: @SuspiciousSara

Follow The Beard: @TheFuckingBeard

The hardest part of the whole thing was making all of the different twitter accounts. I only had 3 emails to work with and already had an account to start with, so I had to sign up for a couple of new email accounts in order to make all of the characters I wanted. This took a lot longer than I expected it to. Switching back and forth between all of the characters and trying to give them some sort or back story or personality in just 140 characters was also more difficult than I had anticipated. The author of these comics keeps coming out with new ones as we speak so I’ll try to keep the tweets up to date as much as I can.

If there is anything that I’ve learned from this project, it’s that telling a story is hard. Even when I already had characters and events to work with it was a challenge to tie them all together in a meaningful way. I didn’t want to rehash what was said or done in the comic so most of the tweets I wrote either responded to the events of the last strip or led into the next one. As I look back at all of John’s tweets it does tell a very loose story, but I think it is the combination of his tweets, the other characters’ and the comics that give you an actual story worth reading.

I hope you enjoy both the comics and my twitter additions.

 

Pooh sounds better than it looks

After a lot of duds from the remix generator I would up with one that I liked. The original assignment was to take a quote and put it in a picture with a background that enhances it. My remix card was “Media Bender,” where I do the assignment using another media. I decided to use one of my favorite quotes from A.A. Milne (He wrote Winnie the Pooh):

“Well,” said Pooh, “what I like best,” and then he had to stop and think. Because although Eating Honey was a very good thing to do, there was a moment just before you began to eat it which was better than when you were, but he didn’t know what it was called.

I recorded myself reciting the poem on SoundCloud and then started looking for a suitable background to add to it. I searched around on sound bible and found a track called sunny day that was basically just nature sounds from the woods. This matched both the tone I wanted and the length of the clip so I wouldn’t have to do that much editing. I opened both clips up in Audacity to put the finishing touches on it and make sure the background wasn’t overpowering.

Here it is. Enjoy!

Remix Failures

I spent a lot of time just clicking through the ds106 remix generator to see what combinations would be doable and/or fun. I must have had to reload that page over 15 times before I got one that even made sense. I know that there are some great combinations from the ones we came up with in class, but I was only getting god awful ones. Maybe that says something about my imagination that I couldn’t see a way to make any of them work. Let me give you some examples of what I mean and you can decide for yourself.

(How do you add a sidekick to a badge?)

I think one of the big problems was that there were a lot of type specific remix cards. Many of them were geared towards video assignments, so when they get paired with image assignments it doesn’t really make a lot of sense.

 

TDC Update #?!?

I have really been slacking on these, but here’s what I have done semi-recently.

I actually took this picture for a daily create a while ago and didn’t use it, but I held onto it because I liked how it turned out. This is my living room through an empty wine jug.

I was blanking on what to do, so I asked my friend kevin to just say anything, knowing that he would come through for me.

This next one is my picture of a beautiful mess. I don’t know about beautiful, but my closet is certainly a mess.

 

I took this next one as an object representing a gate between two realities. I took it for some reason…but in truth I have no idea what that was anymore.

 

Thats all I have for right now. On to something else. Busy, busy, busy.

Flubetheus: Rise of the Flub

When I went to the movies a while ago to see the Hunger Games (awesome btw) I saw the trailer for Prometheus for the hundredth time. It was during this particular viewing that I noticed a little green thing in the corner of one of the shots and remarked to one of my friends how it looked like flubber. This set off the spark for my movie mashup assignment.

I took most of the trailer for prometheus and inserted clips from Flubber whenever they had shots of aliens or chaos. It was simple conceptually but much harder to do once I got the project into iMovie. I wanted to keep the cuts in sync with the dramatic soundtrack and that was hard since I had edited stuff at the end first. I ended up having to detach the audio fro prometheus and shorten it a little bit just to have everything match up. Thus, the flubber music at the end.

5 Seconds

One of the video assignments that caught my eye this week was the one archetype, five movies, five seconds assignment. It’s exactly what it sounds like. Take 5, one second clips from 5 movies and cut them together to show a common archetype they all share. Mine was fairly easy. I did the old wise man archetype. These are very common in epics and there were plenty of options to choose from.

My favorite was the one from Doc Brown. It was a little over 1 second, but I think it was worth it.

Coming soon…

I just spent the last half hour watching movie trailers in preparation for the movie trailer mash-up assignment. I started off thinking about doing something with the notebook and dodgeball, since those came out on the same weekend, but it didn’t pan out. I finally settled on the two movies that I want to do. I wont give them away just yet, but one is very old and the other isn’t in theaters yet.

Before I can get going on that though I need to finish up my video essay. I’m doing Dr. Horrible’s Sing Along Blog. It is by far my favorite musical. If you’ve never seen it before, here’s a taste.

I’ve got all the video lined up, and all of the analysis written. All that’s left is to actually sit down and record it.

Final project?

I’m not quite sure what to do for a final project yet. At first I was going to create a character on twitter that would update a couple of times every day and tell a story through tweets. I still might do that. But I also want to look into maybe doing some full game commentary on an Ultimate game. The only problem with that is finding a game with a good enough story. There are plenty of rivalries in ultimate, but they mostly appeal to people like me who play the sport and I’m not sure if I can get ahold of footage from a game with a good enough story and good enough play to make it watchable. Any games that meet those requirements generally already have commentary. So, at the moment I guess I’m leaning towards a twitter character unless the perfect footage surfaces. Feel free to comment with any good/funny character ideas.

Play-By-Play

Ultimate is one of my passions. So, I decided to take an awesome play from a game and break down the video.

Some of the jargon might not make sense to those who haven’t played before so I’ll try to explain some of the terms I use here. A handler is a player who is designated to throw the disc to receivers. Being a handler is sort of like being a quarterback, except there are usually 3 on the field at a time. Bookends happen when a player gets a D and then the resulting score. Nothing special happens because of this other than getting bragging rights.