The last time I used iMovie was in 2003. There wasn't much in the Lynda.com videos about working in odd aspect ratios so I thought I'd give a series of still images a try. The embedded video is 550 x 550 pixels.
It looks like I have a lot to learn about this process but, with the exception of a few images, this short video did turn out crisper and cleaner than I expected. No idea why some images looked so much better than others.
Credits: Images courtesy of Mac Lab students.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
BP7_OMM_Evernote 2.0 Beta 1

Note: I could nail it by cutting the and they all lived happily ever after but I'm a sucker for happy endings.
For all the time Evernote has been saving me, this video has taken it all back. :P
Higher quality version of the video may be found here.
Credits: Image courtesy of Oleg Volk.
BP4_Evernote 2.0 Beta 1

— Morton Hunt / The Universe Within
Sherman, set the WABAC Machine to 1974...
My first graphic design teacher at Cal Poly stressed the importance of beginning and maintaining a morgue file—a manilla folder containing photos, ads, logos, color—anything that sparked one's imagination. In the third of a century+ since that day I've collected thousands of images, first in a series of manilla folders (during the initial 20 years) and in countless digital folders (in the past 15 years).
In many ways, the manilla folders served me better as I could always find what I was looking for (though it may have taken a while). The digital archive contains far more imagery but it is currently scattered across four computers (two laptops, a Mac Pro, and a G4 that won't die), stacks of CDs, and a half-dozen portable hard drives. I just searched for Images in my user account on this laptop (not even a year old) the Finder's results say it has: More that 10,000 items.
To combat this disconnect between image collection and delivery to students, I created the Inspiration page on April 5, 2009. While more successful at archiving imagery than anything I'd tried in the past, it is ridiculously labor-intensive to support and is similar to the old manilla folders in that it's not a searchable imagery database. It does serve as an alternative—however unsatisfactory—to Google Images for students to use in order to find inspiration.
But, since beginning this Masters program at FSO, I've not had the hours and hours to dedicate to discovering new resources and, more importantly, to add each image to the Inspiration archive all the while knowing it wasn't the 21st century equivalent of a morgue file I'd hoped it would be.

Or perhaps I should say, enter the Evernote 2.0 Beta that I read about on Macworld four days ago. Unlike image services like Flickr or Picasa, Evernote is neither blocked by the district now nor likely to be blocked in the future.
The Evernote Beta includes something called stacks that are actually nested folders which makes it far more useful but the real clincher is that the Beta introduces Notebook Sharing—the ability to share notebooks (folders) with other Evernote users. The Premium version ($45 per year) allows other users to edit shared notebooks.
I've been testing the Beta the past few days and am ecstatic. I'll be recording a series of videos to chronicle the tool and its uses and will share them here. For now, here's a look at one of Evernote's how-to videos:
One Minute Evernote video may be found here.
Credits: Featured image by Mac Lab students. Evernote logo and video via Evernote and YouTube.
Off Topic | 2010 EduBlog Awards
Without even knowing it had been nominated, I just found out that the Mac Lab Blog made the cut and is now a finalist in the 2010 EduBlog Awards. If you're so inclined, go to the Best Class Edublog page, peruse the nominees, and cast your vote.
Note: One vote per IP address to prevent stuffing the ballot box. :)
Note: One vote per IP address to prevent stuffing the ballot box. :)
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
BP3_iGoogleScreenShots

— Ralph Waldo Emerson / Self Reliance
My past is fraught with bad choices and good ideas cast to the wind, a myriad of wasted opportunities, an ocean of what ifs. Perhaps that would still be the case had fate not intervened and bounced me along a string of unlikely coincidences, leading me directly to Room 246 in Valhalla High School. There, the students and I have proven that Marilyn Ferguson was right when she wrote (in the Aquarian Conspiracy): Our past is not our potential. The Mac Lab is a living testament to abiding by one's spontaneous impression with good-humored inflexibility.
As I wrote in my class blog:
I knew how this second semester was going to unfold when I stood before the class the day we returned to school back in January [2009]. I remember, quite distinctly, how I took a breath and began to speak, but the words weren't anything I'd planned on saying. Sudden inspiration altered our direction that day. The blog was born the following week. We've had one constant though, from that first post right up to yesterday's. We experiment. Every creative act involves a measure of uncertainty. We don't move from A to B in a straight line. We learn though process. We ponder, reflect, imagine, adapt, improve, refine, present, and begin again. We actively seek out inspiration, always reaching higher.

I'm wondering how many other priceless ideas are waiting in the wings of our Full Sail experience. As was said in my Big Idea Pitch: Theory is all well and good but we need need real world solutions today and that's what I'm interested in.
Note: The imagery on display during that segment should make clear that I'm interested in the practical application of theory and I'm intent on applying it now (as I've done since day one), not waiting until month six.
Every student deserves the best I've got the moment I've got it. In the Mac Lab, we show what we know—both the students and myself. Our experiment is ongoing and the results so far are more than encouraging. (Current qualitative and quantitative findings are described on this page.)
As Emerson wrote in Literary Ethics:
The hour of that choice is the crisis of your history... Be content with a little light, so it be your own. Explore and explore. Be neither chided nor flattered out of your position of perpetual inquiry… Make yourself necessary to the world, and mankind will give you bread.

Fate handed me a second chance. My students deserve no less.
Long ago, far and away, or always somewhere near
Conductor’s instrumental, sends notes to inner ear
Harmonic reconvergence, improvisation’s planned
To amend the broken page, pour melodies from band
Watering the wildest flowers, a second-handed chance
To trade in white-washed paddock walls, for suit and horse and lance
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