HTML – help!

I’m actually freaking out because tomorrow is our HTML test. For all those who are unaware what this is, it basically just involves ‘coding’ to create a webpage. Coding. I know right? Isn’t that what those geeks on ‘The Social Network’ do all day and night? I am no Mark Zuckerberg. This whole thing is very new and unfamiliar to me and even though we went through what to do during our tutorial last week, I am pretty certain I am going to be sitting at my keyboard tomorrow with a look of both confusion and despair on my face. Not looking forward to it that’s for sure. It is only a pass/fail test. So I just need to.. not fail. Wish me luck.

 

mz

 

Just need to borrow this guy’s brain for a couple of hours tomorrow afternoon!

Toto we’re not in Kansas anymore.

This week’s reading by Ted Nelson was on the whole about hypertext. He defines hypertext as: non sequential writing – text that branches and allows choices to the reader, best read at an interactive screen. I suppose our blogs are made up of hypertext. Each post has been given a title which readers can click on, which then leads them into the post. The blog does not have to be read in a sequential order, although it can be, too.

 

The other reading is by Vannevar Bush, “As We May Think” in which he discusses the joint power of science and invention and where they can lead us into the future. He articulates that further progress needs to be made for the mind rather than just our physical presence. This was written in 1945, just following the completion of World War II. He predicts inventions of the future. It is amazing how far the world has come since then, and even more amazing when we ponder just how much further it will continue to develop. Scary, even. But if one thing’s for certain, technology is going to make up a HUGE part of it.

Symposium 4.

Something that was raised in the lecture was that we would all know how to write and publish a book, by going to a publisher to get it printed and bound. However, most of us don’t even know how to write our own web page! We, the children of the digital age, wouldn’t know how to do that. Actually, two of us in our lecture could. Luckily we are learning how to create HTML pages in class this week (:

 

The question of validity on the internet was also discussed. This is something I often wonder about. For instance just this morning I saw a post claiming Robin Williams had committed suicide. I was skeptical about its validity at first but after finding a number of articles reporting the same thing, I accepted it as truth. I don’t know if that’s how you should determine truth but that’s what I do anyway! I suppose I also take into account the source to determine whether it’s reliable or not, because anyone these days can chuck whatever nonsense they like up on the internet for the world to see.

Genie. You’re free.

Today the world is mourning the loss of famous, well loved actor and comedian, Robin Williams. Robin was found dead in his home, due to speculated suicide. He was a bipolar sufferer who was amidst an episode of depression at the time of his death.

 

Bipolar disorder is something very close to me and it saddens me deeply to see someone lose their battle to it. It is moments like this the importance of seeking help is highlighted. We can’t let lives continue to be lost due to such a monstrous, helpless disease.

 

Rest in peace, Robin. And as Evan Rachel Wood tweeted so profoundly this morning: Genie. You’re free.

rw

 

Network literacy.

The reading this week was by our very own lecturer Adrian Miles. He discussed the concept that is ‘Network Literacy’. Opening with an anecdote about a girl going to the library to borrow a book. This takes many steps. With the emergence of the Internet however, we have a much easier solution – just Google it.

 

Network literacy is, in a nutshell, having the knowledge to be able to participate as a peer within the emerging networks that are now the product of the Internet, and to have as ‘deep’ an understanding of the logics or protocols of these networks as we do of print.

 

All kinds of media, whether it be web pages, blog posts, photos or videos are weaved and interconnected throughout such networks. Where print literacy is a purely two way relationship, network literacy can grow and expand, extending itself between consumers through collaboration.

 

This is an interesting topic which I’m sure we will learn more about – this subject is Networked Media, of course.

Symposium 3.

In today’s symposium we firstly discussed a question raised by another student. It was: How much freedom do we have when writing critically of others work before we become liable for defamation or copyright infringement? This is something I have thought about also. You can’t exactly jump on your blog and badmouth whoever you please.

 

Someone asked if it’s okay to link a Youtube video to your blog, for example. Adrian answered that this is okay, as in most cases they (Youtube) are accepting the liability for that. He also mentioned that there is no such thing as freedom of speech in Australian media law. The only country that does have it is South America I believe.

 

There is a difference between opinion and criticism. Criticism is informed by a position of knowledge. So basically, “If you don’t know what you’re talking about, shut up.” Simple!

Ah, the life of the theatre.

So for all those who are unaware, which is probably everyone, I am in a little production called The Addams Family. I am Morticia Addams. Today I am stuck outside the theatre, where I have been for over an hour, waiting for the techs to let us in. Organization 101: Book the theatre for the correct time, not 2 hours after the actors are scheduled to arrive.

 

The show opens tomorrow. Yes, tomorrow. And we are a little unprepared. However, we’re rehearsing 24/7 to get this thing on the road (stage). I had to miss last week’s tute due to desperate rehearsals and it looks like I might have to miss tomorrow’s (the tute goes until 6.30 and the show starts at 7.30, awkward). But I’m a little concerned because I think we’ve got an assessment in class the week after which I’m probably not going to know what to do without being there tomorrow.

 

Ah, the life of the theatre.

 

addams

 

Luckily, I’ve just checked and it’s week 5, so that makes it a bit better, I guess.

 

 

This is copyrighted, yeah?

Something I learnt from the readings this week that was quite interesting is that the duration of copyright is the lifetime of the creator plus 70 years. Whoa.

Also I had never heard of a Creative Commons where rather than an owner reserving all their rights, they relinquish some rights and reserves to others. There are different licenses they can choose from, such as an “attribution” license where others can use their work, as long as the original owner is credited as the author.

So we have to be very careful about what material we use in our blog as we must avoid copyright. Any work we produce on our blog is also copyrighted material, which I wasn’t aware of. I thought you had to go through some kind of process to get your stuff copyrighted.

Symposium 2

Our Networked Media lecture, or symposium, this week was very interesting. We discussed the idea of stories, even considering the three act structure coined by Aristotle. Our lecturer, Adrian, even got us to explain what reading is, beginning with how to use a book, which was quite comical in itself.

He went on to explain that a book always has a first and last page. There in no avoiding this. There are pages inside; of course, right – it wouldn’t be a book without them. The internet however, is a whole other story. There are no pages, no beginning, no end. It is just a screen that can transform into a multitude of information. The internet is limitless. What an exciting world we live in. It is our role as media students to take advantage of this and use it in the most innovative way possible.

I’m baaaaaack.

So here we are, my first blog post. Actually, that’s a lie. I did have a blog, once. It was going to be a fun-filled, hilarity-inducing site relaying my awesome life at college. However, after my very first post, my student president called me to his room and informed me that my blog was too inappropriate and wouldn’t reflect kindly on the college. So I cracked it. Ended my newfound career as a blogger. Deleted my blog. Done. But alas, I am back. Although, my blog will be much more tame this time. I am blogging about my experience studying Networked Media after all. So ah, here I go..

Okay I actually don’t have much to report just yet. My first Networked Media class was interesting. My teacher seems cool (shout out to Jason if you’re reading!) What immediately caught my attention was the fact our first assignment is to create a HTML page. What in God’s name is a HTML page? It seems very high tech and I am not very information technology minded. I guess we will be learning this in the upcoming classes. There’s also a blogging assignment, an essay, the works.

I’m pretty keen to get into Networked Media. It sounds different to what I’ve studied before so it should be quite interesting! Stay posted.