Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Dr. Crane interview


What do you wish students knew about the certificate before starting?
Certificate is in limbo. Would rather have them go into the writing studies emphasis/minor. Tech comm. is a growing field but also is also changing-employers use tech writers on contract basis, so you either have to be a hustler or need to use tech comm. as addendum/expansion of another skillset. People are hired for tech comm. but job description is expanded beyond that.

Can you define the tech comm certification? What is it in a nutshell?
The next best thing to the minor.

What skills do completers receive?
Increased knowledge of genre, better editors, better document designers, acquired thinking skills necessary to acquire new/further skills within tech comm

What kinds of jobs can students get with the certificate? Would this lead to any kinds of opportunities for grad school?
Jobs: Lately people have been hiring/querying technical communicators for SEO. Editing and writing in small local businesses. If you acquired the certification in addition to domain specific major then you have more value- two people up for one job- if one person can write and has the portfolio to back it up then they have more value to an employer.

Grad school: If going to grad school there’s an academic bias against anything vocational. An English major with certificate would be good but someone with the minor is in a better position

Are there any on-campus opportunities related to the certificate?
No, and there is no local chapter of Society for Technical Communication

What is the normal amount of time it takes students to complete the certification?
Not sure

Difference between writing studies minor and certification?
Minor is more involved- more courses, more hours, gain more experience
Really need to focus on building portfolio. Classes and coursework are more meaningful if you see them as pieces of your portfolio.

Anything else?
In my opinion, shifting more toward writing studies. Not a replacement but a good place to acquire those skills and other related important skills. In a perfect world we’d have a tech comm. major but that would require a shift in focus and resources within the department and not sure if dept would like to make that reallocation.

Arrested Development intro and Manovich intro


Arrested Development is a TV series which originally aired 53 episodes on FOX between 2 November 2003 and 10 February 2006. More episodes are currently in production and will air on Netflix.

During Arrested Development's original run, ratings were never good but the show enjoyed lots of critical acclaim. In 2004, Arrested Development was nominated for seven Emmy Awards and won five. Also in 2004, the show received a TV Land award for "Future Classic," and in 2007, Time Magazine included Arrested Development on its list of 100 Best TV shows of all time.

The show centers around three generations of the Bluth family- George Sr. and Lucille, their children GOB (George Oscar Bluth), Michael, Lindsay (and her husband Tobias), and Buster, and their grandchildren, Michael's son George Michael and Lindsay's daughter Maeby. 

The Bluth Company, the family business, mainly markets and builds McMansions, but the only profitable division of the company is the frozen banana stand.

George Sr. (Jeffrey Tambor) is the family patriarch and (original) CEO of the Bluth Company. The series begins with him passing on control of the company to his wife, Lucille, and promptly being arrested by the SEC for "using the company as his personal piggy-bank." While his children were growing up, they saw him as distant and difficult to please and are more concerned about how his imprisonment will affect their lifestyle than how it will affect them.

Lucille (Jessica Walter) is a highly-functioning alcoholic. She is manipulative, demanding, controlling, pampered, and emotionally abusive to her children and others under her control. As CEO, she first passes on control of the company to the child most under her thumb- Buster. Only after all the responsibility sends Buster to the hospital with a panic attack, does she asks the child most suited for the job, Michael.

GOB (Will Arnett) is George Sr. and Lucille's oldest child. He works as a magician and is the founder of The Magician's Alliance, a group which later kicked him out for revealing trade secrets. His parents openly admit to disliking and not respecting him, and his bitter rivalry with his younger brother Michael is often fueled by George Sr. and Lucille for their personal gain. His personality is bombastic, but his confidence is easily shattered and can quickly dissolve into self-loathing. He occasionally has problems with speaking English properly.

Michael (Jason Bateman) is the second oldest son and "twin" brother of Lindsay. He serves as the "straight man," introduced in the title sequence of every episode as "the one son who had no choice but to keep [the family] all together," but as the series continues, he increasingly seems as crazy as the rest of the family. His wife died two years prior to the pilot and his relationship with his son, George Michael, is almost uncomfortably close. 

Lindsay (Portia de Rossi) is the self-described liberal member of the family. Lindsay sees herself as a dedicated activist for many causes, but she is really a shallow, superficial princess who supports these causes for status. The only money she ever "raises" comes from the Bluth Company. She married Tobias Funke as an act of youthful defiance and bitterly resents him. Lindsay has incredibly low self esteem, due to constant emotional abuse from her mother and Tobias' lack of interest in her. After she and Tobias decide to open their marriage, she has very little success with other men. She is often shown to be neglectful of her daughter, Maeby.

Buster (Tony Hale) is the youngest Bluth son. He never moved out of his parents' home. He has an unhealthy attachment to his mother, and Lucille has sheltered and controlled him so much that he is childlike, socially stunted and prone to panic attacks. He has spent much of his adult life completing graduate programs like cartography and 18th century agrarian business. Lucille enlists Buster in the Army because a Michael Moore-esque character antagonizes her, but his training is unsuccessful. He later loses his left hand to a "loose seal" and wears a hook, then a prosthetic hand, on his left arm.

Tobias Funke (David Cross) is Lindsay's husband, a sucessful analrapist (analyst and therapist) turned unsuccessful actor. He suffers from "never-nude" syndrome, a condition which is, as the series' narrator states, "exactly what it sounds like." He constantly wears a pair of denim cut-offs. One running joke of the series is the question of his sexuality, as well as his understudy position in the Blue Man Group (which he initially thought was a support group for depressed men). Like his wife, he is incredibly neglectful of his daughter, Maeby.

George Michael (Michael Cera) is Michael's only child. His mother died from ovarian cancer and he is very close to his father. In addition to attending high school, he runs the banana stand, the only profitable division of the Bluth Company. For much of the series, he has an intense crush on his cousin Maeby, even while he has a girlfriend.

Maeby (Alia Shawkat) is the daughter of Lindsay and Tobias. She is rebellious, fiercely independent, secretive, and great at coming up with schemes to improve her life (like pretending to have a mysterious illness called BS to get donations or working as a Hollywood studio executive). She doesn't quite realize the extent of George Michael's crush on her, and at one point accidentally marries him.

Manovich

Three commonly used terms explained

  • language: Language is used instead of other terminology options to differentiate between this study and studies of new media and cyberculture which focus on sociology, economics and politics. This text focuses on emergent conventions, recurrent design patters, and key forms, studied in relation to other arts and media, computer technology, contemporary visual culture, and contemporary information culture.
  • new media object: The term holds up for all digital media types (including but not limited to digital stills and video, 3D environments, a website or the Web as a whole). Object is a standard term in the computer industry. Russian constructivists and productivists in the 1920s referred to their works as objects. Manovich wants to invoke all those connotations because in new media, the line between art and design is fuzzy, and he would like to reactivate the concept from the '20s of laboratory experimentation.
  • representation: New media objects are cultural objects and therefore represent and sometimes construct an outside referent (existing object, historical information, system of categories used by a culture or social group). Software interfaces of operating systems and software applications are also representations. Data organized in a particular way represents a worldview. Two key organizational system are
    1. hierarchical: assumes the world is a logical place and every object has a distinct and well-defined place (EX: GUI from 1984 Macintosh onward)
    2. "flat" network of hyperlinks: every object has the same importance and is or can be connected to everything else (EX: the World Wide Web from the 1990s onward)

Other concepts that may be important in my project:

  • modularity
  • automation
  • variability (flashbacks)
  • selection
  • templates

Monday, October 29, 2012

common headings


Bullying Intro

Bullying has been a problem for as long as we could communicate.  All it takes is being rude to another person.  How easy is that?  The problem with bullying is the damage it does to the person being bullied.  Bullying causes low self-esteem and low self-worth in both the victims and the bullies.  The results are often so sever that the victim attempts suicide, often more than once.  It is saddest when those attempts are successful.  The three most basic types of bullying are physical aggression, verbal aggression, and relational aggression.  While physical and verbal aggression are self explanatory, relational aggression is not.  Relational aggression involves gossip, spreading rumors, social isolation, purposely being left out of activities, and cyber-bullying.  For the most part, physical and verbal bullying as well as most relational bullying stay at school or on the playground, however cyber-bullying usually takes place at home and allows other bullying to go everywhere with the victim rather than having a place of refuge as with physical bullying.

Now here is the thing with bullying laws and policies, they only do so much.  While 49 states have anti-bullying laws that define bullying and policies for schools (Montana is the state with no laws), only 20 of those states define cyber-bullying and include it in the policies.  Of those 20 states, only two include cyber-bullying originating of campus so that the schools can get involved directly.  Most of the other states have left the policies open so the schools can decide if they want to include off campus bullying in their individual policies.  I have been reviewing Utah State Code on the definitions and policies and the definition is clear about physical, verbal and cyber-bullying, but not the other forms of relational bullying.  As the code includes cyber-bullying in the policies, it does not include cyber-bullying originating off campus or after school hours.  There is not currently any federal code on cyber-bullying.  The Megan Meier Cyberbullying Prevention Act is still in review three years after being introduced to congress because of the controversy with freedom of speech.  Constitutionality of any anti-bullying law is an issue because of the first amendment.  Do these laws cross that boundary or not?  The jury is still out.

Here is another item of interest.  Most of the Public Service Announcements, advertisements, and films that are anti-bullying are produced in Canada including the new movie cyberbu//y.  I also found more videos on YouTube that were made outside within the US.  We are behind the times as a nation on this very serious issue of bullying, particularly cyber-bullying.

Manovich Points of Interest:
(I don't have my book with me at this point, so I am guessing.)

  • Integration
  • Compositing
  • Human-Technology Interface

Sunday, October 28, 2012

iPhone 5 Home Page Paragraph & Manovich-isms

The iPhone 5 is a touchscreen smartphone created by Apple Inc.  It was released on September 21, 2012.  This is the sixth version of the iPhone to be released since it all began just 5 years ago in 2007.  In just the first 24 hours of going on sale, Apple sold over 2 million devices, and after the third day Apple reported sales in excess of 5 million!  Weighing just 3.95oz it is the lightest and thinnest smartphone of its kind.  The iPhone 5 received strong praise for the new larger screen measuring 4-inches diagonally.  Criticism came when Apple announced that a new universal connector/charger would be required for the phone.  This lessened when consumers learned that all forthcoming iOS devices would use this same connector and that it was done to be able to make their future products more thin.  It has now been nearly a month and a half since the pre-orders began, and the device is still sold out worldwide, and the back-orders won't ship for at least 3-4 weeks.  Apple has clearly created a product that is desirable to millions worldwide and we look forward to seeing what is to come!

Possible Manovich-isms that could appear in the final project:
  • Numerical Representation
  • Modularity
  • Automation
  • Variability
  • Transcoding
  • Hyperlinking
  • Interface
  • Operations
  • Illusions
  • Forms
  • Database Logic

Monday, October 8, 2012

Arrested Development videos

Nearly all of the videos I found are manipulations of official media- some are poorly ripped from DVDs or online streams of the show.

Many are compilations, like best of the show, best of a character, or scenes relating to a certain theme.









Some are set to music, like this one to the "Mahna Mahna" song (popularized by the Muppets) with "Mahna Mahna" replaced by people saying the name of one particular character.




These last two are great. Like every other mature adult in North America, my favorite song this summer was the complex and artful "Call Me Maybe," by Carly Rae Jeppeson. Luckily, Arrested Development has a character named Maeby. One video is short clips of the show set against the song's tune to make the characters "sing" it. The other is set to the original version of the song and showcases George Michael's crush on his cousin Maeby. (I know, I know, but trust me, its funny.)





Nearly all the videos I found are intended to be humorous. I think the cultish nature of the show led to the creation of some of the videos- fans wanted a way to keep it alive in some way and contribute to the continued cultural relevance of the show. The final broadcast episode aired in February of 2006 and people are still recycling the content in new ways over six years later.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Bullying Videos

So, wow,  I can't believe the videos I found.  I didn't expect to find anything funny or light.  I expected to find heavy stuff and it all was, sad heavy.  I din't know how many I would find, but they just kept coming up.  There is a lot of stuff on bullying, almost all of it is campaigning against bullying and several of them are from across the world.

There were several links to news broadcasts including more than one link to the news anchor's reply to a bully.  I also found links to the movies Bully and cyberbully.  You can watch all of cyberbully on Youtube if you want to.  There also ant-bullying commercials.

Most of the amateur bullying movies I found are the "I have a Secret" videos.  These videos involve no talking from the person on screen; the person holds up cards telling their story.  All of the stories are very personal and sad.  They usually end with a message of hope or recommending a hotline or website that can help.  The video below is an excellent example of these videos.



I did find a few videos that were done by high schoolers about bullying that were actual movies.  The editing was simple, but the message just as strong as the "I have a Secret" videos.  One of them was soft music, pictures of somebody's sister, and words telling her story.  Others have quotes and stats about bullying and end with a call to action.  The one below is one of my favorites.  This one was definitely done by amateurs, but still had a strong message, both with the story and the stats.  They were also careful to mention that it was a true story of a nameless boy that committed suicide at 13 due to bullying.  After giving some stats, they use a guilt trip as a call to action.


Non of the videos I found were particularly funny.  They all pulled at your heartstrings just as they were designed to do.  I especially find the "I have a Secret" videos powerful.  These videos have a profound effect because they are all personal stories.  There seems to be a whole community of these movies.  Teenagers are making their own videos because they are seeing them.  Some of their posts talk about their reasons for posting the videos.  One girl wanted to start the new year letting people know that there is help for those in situations like hers.  While not all of the "I have a Secret" videos have to do with being bullied, they are about depression, suicide attempts and/or mental and emotional illnesses resulting from abuse of some sort (bullying fits the abuse category).  I wonder how many of these kids make a video for therapy.

Grammar Videos

OK, this one was pretty fun.

Not surprisingly, I found several videos that were about "grammar nazis". I mean, YouTube is all about funny videos, right? And the "grammar nazi" angle is one of the only ways that you can be funny when it comes to grammar. The other videos I found were strictly educational in nature. You know, boring videos that look like you are sitting in a college class. There isn't much to say about the educational videos, other than the fact that they were created by some grammar enthusiasts with very little production value.

The humorous videos, on the other hand, were all over the place as far as production value goes. There were some videos that looked like a 13 year old kid made them with his phone, and others that were literally shown on the Disney channel. (The Disney one was absolutely awful, by the way). Like I said, a majority of them went with the "grammar nazi" theme. Most of these videos followed a similar story line: somebody doesn't use proper grammar and is rebuked by someone else (the "grammar nazi"). I should note here that I pretty much hated all the so-called humorous videos that I found. The "grammar nazi" angle is pretty well-worn, and there are only so many ways that you can go with it.

One that did make me laugh, however, still went with the "grammar nazi" theme, but kind of had a more literal take on it. First, a little context. This video is one of many "Hitler rant" videos that I have seen. The footage is from a movie about Hitler, but the subtitles are made up. I don't know when the first of these parodies was made, but a few notable examples include "Hitler reacting to the Kanye West vs Taylor Swift VMA moment", "Hitler getting banned from XBOX live", and "Hitler reacting to Usain Bolt setting the 100M record". Same video clip, different captions. So here is the grammar one. WARNING: There are a few swears! (In text only).



Funny right? I liked it. So this is a meme, only in video form. I found it interesting that we didn't discuss too many video memes in class (besides the Rick Roll, really)... But there are quite a few of them out there.

So there you go. Who would have thought you could find humorous parodies that involve the topic of grammar?

iPhone 5 on YouTube!

Enthusiastic Apple fans like to think of themselves as a very "creative" type of people.  The valiant will argue that the Apple products help them to expand their creativity and create whatever their minds can conjure up.  These theories were proven true as I looked through the various fan-videos for the iPhone 5 on YouTube. 

I knew that I would see some pretty creative things, but what I found was that the "die-hards" have a great deal of time on their hands!  I found everything from CG concept videos that were created as speculation prior to the release if the new iPhone to "drop tests" done with the iPhone 5 and its closest competitor, the Samsung Galaxy SIII once the phone had been released. 

The most common videos done by amateurs currently are "un-boxing" videos of their new iPhones.  This is to give a first-look of the phone as they unpackaged it for the very first time.  It is very painful to watch for those who have not yet got their iPhones, given that they are back-ordered for over a month right now!  Other videos include comparisons with older iPhone models as well as with other brands of advanced smart phones. 

Picking one of my favorites to post on the blog was actually very difficult! I narrowed it down to three videos.  I'll post first place below, but I think it's only fair to mention second and third place here. 

Third place was a prank done where a man dressed up as an Apple employee, and would walk by lots of different lines of anxious fans waiting in line the night before the release.  He had a stack of "boxes of iPhones" on a dolly that he was wheeling toward the store.  As he stopped to ask some of the fans if they were excited, he would accidentally stop the dolly too quickly and the boxes would fall.  It was so funny to see some of the people's reactions, who just thought their new iPhones had been broken.  That video can be seen here.

Second place was a drop test done on a cobblestone pathway.  This was a test done using the new iPhone 5 and the Samsung Galaxy SIII.  It's very interesting.  The man performing the test drops both phones from 3 different heights (the waist pocket, mid-torso, and the ear).  I was surprised to see that the Galaxy screen cracks on the second drop, and the iPhone 5 screen never cracks.  It's actually quite fascinating to see.  This video can be seen here.

First place I will show below because I think it was the most creative and probably took the creator the most time.  This is a concept video created before the iPhone 5 had ever been announced.  It is a video portraying what this fan hopes to see in the new iPhone or at least in a coming iPhone.  Although the only feature that was true is the new thin design, it is awesome to see what he has done with computer graphics and his imagination.  Enjoy! :)

Monday, October 1, 2012

Arrested Development: The Novelization

The first two chapters of the Google narrative set up the background for Arrested Development. Chapter One contains all the information you could ever want about, "an American television sitcom created by Mitchell Hurwitz for the Fox Broadcasting Company. The show centers on the Bluth family..." thanks to our faithfully know-it-all friend, Wikipedia.Then, in Chapter TwoIMDb teaches us more about our cast of characters. "Level-headed son Michael Bluth takes over family affairs after his father is imprisoned. But the rest of his spoiled, dysfunctional family are making..." All this background has me dying to dive right in. Ready?

Chapter Three contains an unexpected turn of events. We find from Arrested Development Music that "in celebration of their 20th year anniversary, Arrested Development will be performing many dates across the USA beginning in September and continuing..." An odd surprise to throw at us so early in the book, but surprises are good, right? We'll come back to this later. 


Chapter Four takes us to a place where novels have not yet dared to go- video! It reads, simply, "Watch Arrested Development online | Free | Hulu Watch Arrested Development free online. Stream episodes and clips of Arrested Development instantly." From here, we can dispense with all this pesky reading and rot our brains in front of some moving pictures. That's not the only non-novelistic surprise Google has for us though- Chapter Five is made entirely of still images of the family. Looks like they have family portraits taken quite often, huh?


Words make a comeback in Chapter Six, as TV.com gives us more background. "The Emmy Award-winning comedy series ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT revolves around MICHAEL BLUTH (Jason Bateman), the "normal" one in a family of crazies, who..." Fine, we get it. Michael is soooooo great. Why do you keep bragging about him, and why are we just now hearing about this Emmy Award?


Chapter Seven looks to the future: Why Arrested Development on Netflix could change everything... Fascinating! What else? "As plans for Arrested Development's return spread, many details indicate that thanks to Netflix, the popular cult series has the opportunity to not..." But, wait- when did this happen? We'll get the news that launched this news later.


Chapter 8, brought to us by Balboa Observer-Picayune: An Arrested Development Fan Site gives us more of that broad and fascinating background information we've been craving, this time from a source no one recognizes! "A fansite for the FOX TV show Arrested Development with everything you've ever wanted to know about the Bluth family." Hooray!


Finally, a chance to buy something. Chapter Nine gives us a place to purchase the videos we watched for free in Chapter Four, but this time we get to wait for physical disks to be delivered to our homes. Uh, thanks, I guess, Amazon. We did get something new from them though- vague testimonial. "Season One: Winner of the Outstanding Comedy Series Emmy its first year out,Arrested Development is the kind of sitcom that gives you hope for television." Wow, that really makes me want to buy and wait for something I could see for free immediately.


In Chapter 10, we learn more about the music via the most relevant website ever, MySpace. "ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT's official profile including the latest music, albums, songs, music videos and more updates." Does this really belong here?



  1. Chapter 11: We've already heard why Arrested Development on Netflix is great, so here's the announcement from the LA Times that new episodes of the show will be aired exclusively on Neflix. Great. Now Chapter Seven makes more sense. Wow. That was a great ending.
 

Team Two Totality © 2008. Design By: SkinCorner