Monday, May 5, 2008
Final Presentation Errors
Well, I am nearly complete with this final project.
It still has several errors:
*Frame 170 is corrupt and I cannot fix it.
*There is a slight wiggle between frames 45-285. I have tried to line everything up correctly, but the wiggle remains.
*hyperlinks to the World Health Organization and Bureau of Meoterology do not connect correctly.
*The introduction text is supposed to increase in illumination between frames 10-20 and then remain visible frames 25-45. The intro text is only visible on frame 10.
Kathleen
It still has several errors:
*Frame 170 is corrupt and I cannot fix it.
*There is a slight wiggle between frames 45-285. I have tried to line everything up correctly, but the wiggle remains.
*hyperlinks to the World Health Organization and Bureau of Meoterology do not connect correctly.
*The introduction text is supposed to increase in illumination between frames 10-20 and then remain visible frames 25-45. The intro text is only visible on frame 10.
Kathleen
Monday, April 21, 2008
Lab 10
I want to do this virtual camera and scan in from the full view of Italy and the surrounding Mediterranean basin zooming into the island of Sardinia. I do not know where to start with this lab. The full map is in my scene and do not know where to go from there. On the positive side, I have the time and UV developments loaded into my flash movie for my final project. I am hoping to ask for help on Wednesday night. Although, I am sure there will be a line of students looking for solutions and suggestions, just like me.
khj
khj
Monday, April 14, 2008
Lab 9
Well... I've finished. But I am not sure it is correct. I am going to post the map. But I think I still need some hand-holding and a few more hours.
Kathleen
Kathleen
Map trip to Baltimore
On Friday I went to Baltimore to enjoy the Map exposition on display at the Waters Gallery. Unfortunately, I was unable to join the class/GMU field trip. Since I couldn't go with the group, I was happy to make the trip myself.
I viewed every floor of the gallery. The fourth floor exhibit contained local maps. Most of the maps were made by local high school students about information in their neighborhood. The third floor had a large mosaic map of Europe. I saw an ancient mosaic like this one displayed in a church in the middle east a few years back. The second floor had a gallery room of photo graphs collected by the Hubble telescope. I could have stayed in this room for hours! The photographs were beautiful. However, I view the photographs as art, not map. There were more photographs from the Hubble displayed in a ballroom gallery on the third floor. The main map display is on the ground level. I enjoyed viewing some of the popular and well-known maps of modern and ancient time. The rooms were absolutely FULL of school children on Friday. A docent (who was very nice, by-the-way) told me that the map display had " really raised attendance to the museum". He seemed surprised that so many people would be interested in looking at old maps. The hand-craft skill that making these maps requires is amazing. I am so dependent on cut-n-paste and shape files, that the art of map making is a mystery to me.
Thank you for the suggestion to visit the Waters Gallery in Baltimore. I enjoyed the afternoon.
Kathleen
I viewed every floor of the gallery. The fourth floor exhibit contained local maps. Most of the maps were made by local high school students about information in their neighborhood. The third floor had a large mosaic map of Europe. I saw an ancient mosaic like this one displayed in a church in the middle east a few years back. The second floor had a gallery room of photo graphs collected by the Hubble telescope. I could have stayed in this room for hours! The photographs were beautiful. However, I view the photographs as art, not map. There were more photographs from the Hubble displayed in a ballroom gallery on the third floor. The main map display is on the ground level. I enjoyed viewing some of the popular and well-known maps of modern and ancient time. The rooms were absolutely FULL of school children on Friday. A docent (who was very nice, by-the-way) told me that the map display had " really raised attendance to the museum". He seemed surprised that so many people would be interested in looking at old maps. The hand-craft skill that making these maps requires is amazing. I am so dependent on cut-n-paste and shape files, that the art of map making is a mystery to me.
Thank you for the suggestion to visit the Waters Gallery in Baltimore. I enjoyed the afternoon.
Kathleen
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