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Open Attribution Builder
Open Attribution Builder
to help you easily cite open material you find; as you fill out the form the application will automatically generate the attribution for you. to cite only openly distributed work, such as work licensed by Creative Commons or released in the public domain. to provide a default attribution statement. You’re welcome to modify the citation to make it more suitable to your needs.
·openwa.org·
Open Attribution Builder
How speakers and microphones work | Visual.ly
How speakers and microphones work | Visual.ly
"All sounds are produced by vibrations. With a permanent magnet and an electromagnet produced by current flowing through a coil of wire, speakers convert an electrical signal into tiny vibrations"
·visual.ly·
How speakers and microphones work | Visual.ly
How to implement a responsive Youtube / Vimeo embed iframe with Twitter Bootstrap 3? - Bootstrap Themes & Templates - Bootstrap Master
How to implement a responsive Youtube / Vimeo embed iframe with Twitter Bootstrap 3? - Bootstrap Themes & Templates - Bootstrap Master
"In many themes I’ve used great videos from youtube and vimeo. First time when I wanted to add embeded video to my Bootstrap Theme I faced big problem – fixed dimensions. Each video on youtube and vimeo has fixed width and height, but my themes are responsive that’s why I had to find good solution."
·bootstrapmaster.com·
How to implement a responsive Youtube / Vimeo embed iframe with Twitter Bootstrap 3? - Bootstrap Themes & Templates - Bootstrap Master
The Humane Representation of Thought on Vimeo
The Humane Representation of Thought on Vimeo
"New representations of thought — written language, mathematical notation, information graphics, etc — have been responsible for some of the most significant leaps in the progress of civilization, by expanding humanity’s collectively-thinkable territory. But at debilitating cost. These representations, having been invented for static media such as paper, tap into a small subset of human capabilities and neglect the rest. Knowledge work means sitting at a desk, interpreting and manipulating symbols. The human body is reduced to an eye staring at tiny rectangles and fingers on a pen or keyboard. Like any severely unbalanced way of living, this is crippling to mind and body. But it is also enormously wasteful of the vast human potential. Human beings naturally have many powerful modes of thinking and understanding. Most are incompatible with static media. In a culture that has contorted itself around the limitations of marks on paper, these modes are undeveloped, unrecognized, or scorned. We are now seeing the start of a dynamic medium. To a large extent, people today are using this medium merely to emulate and extend static representations from the era of paper, and to further constrain the ways in which the human body can interact with external representations of thought. But the dynamic medium offers the opportunity to deliberately invent a humane and empowering form of knowledge work. We can design dynamic representations which draw on the entire range of human capabilities — all senses, all forms of movement, all forms of understanding — instead of straining a few and atrophying the rest. This talk suggests how each of the human activities in which thought is externalized (conversing, presenting, reading, writing, etc) can be redesigned around such representations."
·vimeo.com·
The Humane Representation of Thought on Vimeo
Meme-Inspired Writing Activities, Part I | Create. Communicate. Connect.
Meme-Inspired Writing Activities, Part I | Create. Communicate. Connect.
"When it comes to both writing and brainstorming, structure is the pipe that helps a writer get the creative juices flowing. The formula of a meme can easily provide that structure, by focusing a writer to think specifically about one key aspect of a character or story. In the activity below, I’ve suggested two popular memes that I find particularly fantastic for character exploration, but I am sure there are many others out there as well. "
·mindyaearly.wordpress.com·
Meme-Inspired Writing Activities, Part I | Create. Communicate. Connect.
More Than Content Marketing or a User Experience: Adaptive Storytelling | Gunther Sonnenfeld | LinkedIn
More Than Content Marketing or a User Experience: Adaptive Storytelling | Gunther Sonnenfeld | LinkedIn
"In one of my earlier posts concerning the content war we face within this wild and wooly multimedia landscape, I laid out a position for how we should consider ‘story-first’ approaches to developing and distributing content. In another post, I touched upon specific storytelling and experience design techniques that we’ve applied to innovation initiatives around the world. Now, I’d like to offer up some perspective on how storytelling itself presents an opportunity to reinvent our relationships to information, products and people."
·linkedin.com·
More Than Content Marketing or a User Experience: Adaptive Storytelling | Gunther Sonnenfeld | LinkedIn
Welcome · WriteRack
Welcome · WriteRack
"How WriteRack works is quite straight forward. You can directly copy and paste what you want to tweetstorm in this box or you can type in directly. WriteRack will automatically format it into a series of tweets and post them one after the other and order it accordingly. After the first 130 characters, any new paragraph creates a new tweet. "
·writerack.com·
Welcome · WriteRack
Free to Play: The Movie
Free to Play: The Movie
FREE TO PLAY is a feature-length documentary that follows three professional gamers from around the world as they compete for a million dollar prize in the first Dota 2 International Tournament. In recent years, E Sports has surged in popularity to become one of the most widely-practiced forms of competitive sport today. A million dollar tournament changed the landscape of the gaming world and for those elite players at the top of their craft, nothing would ever be the same again. Produced by Valve, the film documents the challenges and sacrifices required of players to compete at the highest level.
·freetoplaythemovie.com·
Free to Play: The Movie
SoundWorks Collection
SoundWorks Collection
The goal for the SoundWorks Collection is simple; we are dedicated to profiling the greatest and upcoming sound minds from around the world and highlight their contributions. The SoundWorks Collection was created by Director Michael Coleman in November of 2009 in a partnership with MIX Magazine, several audio focused college schools and programs, and the support of the online sound community worldwide. The SoundWorks Collection takes you behind the scenes and straight to the dub stage for a look into audio post-production for feature films, video game sound design, and original soundtrack composition. This exclusive and intimate video series focuses on individuals and teams behind-the-scenes bringing to life some of the worlds most exciting projects.
·soundworkscollection.com·
SoundWorks Collection
Let Go of Fear for Connected Learning Success | DMLcentral
Let Go of Fear for Connected Learning Success | DMLcentral
"I want to talk about the one thing that I think is the biggest risk in connected learning: Not Trying. The biggest barrier to meaningful experimentation that I’ve encountered is the fear of an experiment not working or achieving the desired results. In other words, people are afraid of failure. When we take things like negativity bias into account, that makes sense. So, how do we reframe learning experimentation outside of failure that takes into account our fear of failure? I think the most successful shift I’ve seen implemented, and that I’ve made myself when I’m teaching is letting go of the fear of failure toward the act of trying and experimenting."
·dmlcentral.net·
Let Go of Fear for Connected Learning Success | DMLcentral
jack-radcliffe | Alison
jack-radcliffe | Alison
"When my daughter Alison was born, in the tradition of a new parent, I began to photograph her, initially in a separate and private body of work. However, in the process of documenting Alison's growth, I developed a passionate interest in human relationships and capturing intimate moments in the lives of family and friends. This affected my photography in a profound way. Rather than the isolated subjects of my earlier work, I became interested in the strength of relationships, oftentimes using personal environments to amplify those conditions.   The significance of these pictures emerges in retrospect. I realize as I look at them, that I created a visual life story of Alison, capturing moments in her metamorphosis from infant to woman-her relationships with friends, her rebellion, and underlying it all, her relationship with me, a constant throughout her life. I wanted to photograph her in all her extremes, and to be part of these times in her life without judging or censoring. Only in this way would I have a true portrait of Alison.   The significance of these pictures emerges in retrospect. I realize as I look at them, that I created a visual life story of Alison, capturing moments in her metamorphosis from infant to woman-her relationships with friends, her rebellion, and underlying it all, her relationship with me, a constant throughout her life. I wanted to photograph her in all her extremes, and to be part of these times in her life without judging or censoring. Only in this way would I have a true portrait of Alison."
·jackradcliffe.org·
jack-radcliffe | Alison
where to store passwords | Mark "Kuzma" Bruk
where to store passwords | Mark "Kuzma" Bruk
"The problem with really good passwords, passphrases and secret question/answer pairs is where to keep them. For the past decade or more I have been using Wikipedia. It is free. It will keep your passwords forever. And it is difficult for someone to find where you put it or prove it is yours – if you use something like TOR while doing what I explain below."
·kuzmabruk.com·
where to store passwords | Mark "Kuzma" Bruk
Tabletop Whale's guide to making GIFs
Tabletop Whale's guide to making GIFs
"Recently I've been getting a lot of emails asking for a tutorial on how to make animations. So this week I put together a quick explanation for anyone who's interested. I archived it as a link on the menu bar of my website, so it'll always be easy to find if you need it. This is just a run-through of my own personal animation workflow, so it's not a definitive guide or anything. There are plenty of other ways to make animations in Photoshop and other programs."
·tabletopwhale.com·
Tabletop Whale's guide to making GIFs
Biodiversity Heritage Library
Biodiversity Heritage Library
"Inspiring discovery through free access to biodiversity knowledge. The Biodiversity Heritage Library works collaboratively to make biodiversity literature openly available to the world as part of a global biodiversity community. BHL also serves as the foundational literature component of the Encyclopedia of Life "
·biodiversitylibrary.org·
Biodiversity Heritage Library
Fluid and responsive YouTube and Vimeo videos with fluidvids.js
Fluid and responsive YouTube and Vimeo videos with fluidvids.js
"One of the major drawbacks to responsive design is managing external plugins/resources, such as YouTube and Vimeo videos – which we can embed into our sites using an iframe. This is where we lose control. Working with iframes is sometimes tricky, especially with video and maintaining aspect ratios. There are some CSS hacks we can do to attempt making iframe videos responsive, but to no success. Better attempts have been made, jQuery plugins, scripts. Some work great, but some warrant further action. Until recent, I’ve been using FitVids.js, from Paravel and Chris Coyier, which is a nifty plugin. But that’s exactly what I don’t want. More plugins. Scripts are by far more effective, and let’s face it, there’s no point using a plugin for responsive videos – why would you want to target a container and choose which videos are responsive? It’s responsive or not, all or nothing. We’re in a world full of plugins, it’s time to start writing your own stuff. So here’s my raw JavaScript alternative to FitVids, it’s much lighter in code, doesn’t require the hefty jQuery library – and much faster too. "
·toddmotto.com·
Fluid and responsive YouTube and Vimeo videos with fluidvids.js
3 | The Poetry Of Yelp: How The Reviews Site Became A Massive Platform For Creativity | Fast Company | business + innovation
3 | The Poetry Of Yelp: How The Reviews Site Became A Massive Platform For Creativity | Fast Company | business + innovation
"It was with those questions in mind that I set out to examine the inner workings of the Yelp community. I quickly discovered that many people find reviewing an incredibly satisfying creative endeavor. The most prolific Yelp reviewers, in fact, treat their write-ups as a kind of art form, and approach them with care and pride. So, the 26,380 reviews that are posted on Yelp every minute can be arguably seen as a large-scale art project, not just a practical tool in modern life."
·fastcompany.com·
3 | The Poetry Of Yelp: How The Reviews Site Became A Massive Platform For Creativity | Fast Company | business + innovation
NimbleText Data Manipulation, Text Manipulation, Code Generation and Automation
NimbleText Data Manipulation, Text Manipulation, Code Generation and Automation
"You can be more awesome at your job by keeping this tool always within reach. NimbleText is a text manipulation and code generation tool available online or as a free download. It magnifies your ability to perform incredible feats of text and data wrangling."
·nimbletext.com·
NimbleText Data Manipulation, Text Manipulation, Code Generation and Automation
Retraction Watch - Tracking retractions as a window into the scientific process at Retraction Watch
Retraction Watch - Tracking retractions as a window into the scientific process at Retraction Watch
we’re interested in whether journals are consistent. How long do they wait before printing a retraction? What requires one? How much of a public announcement, if any, do they make? Does a journal with a low rate of retractions have a better peer review and editing process, or is it just sweeping more mistakes under the rug? These are the sorts of things we’ll cover when we write about a particular retraction, and we hope they’ll form the basis of larger discussions of the obligations of journals. The two of us — both with experience covering science and medicine for the consumer as well as trade press — seem to come across these issues often. The experience one of us, Ivan, has had with Embargo Watch suggests that a blog is a great forum for such conversations. While any particular Retraction Watch post will only carry one of our bylines, we will both contribute to all posts.
·retractionwatch.com·
Retraction Watch - Tracking retractions as a window into the scientific process at Retraction Watch
Web We Want
Web We Want
Web We Want is a global movement to defend, claim and change the future of the Web. The campaign is responding to threats to the future of the Web with a practical and positive vision — unleashing the power of people from around the world to defend, claim and change a Web that is for everyone. We aim to bring about real change at a national and global level.
·webwewant.org·
Web We Want
Web History Timeline | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project
Web History Timeline | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project
"Since its founding in 1989, the World Wide Web has touched the lives of billions of people around the world and fundamentally changed how we connect with others, the nature of our work, how we discover and share news and new ideas, how we entertain ourselves and how communities form and function. The timeline below is the beginning of an effort to capture both the major milestones and small moments that have shaped the Web since 1989. It is a living document that we will update with your contributions. "
·pewinternet.org·
Web History Timeline | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project
What If Your Computer Could See Like You? (Intel IQ magazine)
What If Your Computer Could See Like You? (Intel IQ magazine)
RealSense showed us that we can build personal devices that begin to have human sensibilities. Once our computers can perceive depth, shift their focus and read human emotions or gestures, it opens up new possibilities for our devices to become even more helpful in our lives. “We kept asking ourselves: What would be different if your computer could see like a person?” We’ve captured some of this fascination in a special edition of iQ we’re calling Science of Seeing, where you can learn how RealSense went from idea to reality. You can also explore how the technology works and how you might use it in your life. Along the way, you just might gain a deeper appreciation for the power of seeing.
·iq-realsense.intel.com·
What If Your Computer Could See Like You? (Intel IQ magazine)