
Have you met Scott? Playing around with cinemagraphs and gifs today at the studio
-Shereen

Have you met Scott? Playing around with cinemagraphs and gifs today at the studio
-Shereen

Shereen received First Prize in the Sports Photography division for her work “Determination”. Make sure to check out Shereen on Linked In.
You can see Shereen’s work and the other Winners here.
Congrats Shereen!
-Scott

‘Like insects toward a bright light, humans have gravitated towards technology, quickly forgetting about the formats of the past like laser disc, beta, VHS, and now DVD. But throughout the whole process the content itself hasn’t changed. If you have a good story and plot, you’ve got yourself some potential to make a great film. So when will we stop the great search for the next big thing in technology and how it will advance film?’
http://www.blog.filmarmy.org/2011/01/the-ripple-effect-of-digital-and-analog-in-film/
-Scott
http://www.thewildernessdowntown.com/
This online video has been gaining a lot of attention since it was released yesterday. It utilizes google maps along with html5 compositing to put trees into your childhood suburban neighborhood, and create an eerie user experience that really meshes the songs content to your hometown.
Aside from loving Arcade Fire and they’re new album “The Suburbs” I really enjoyed this Chrome Experiment. I’ve been keeping my eye on Mr.Doob for about a year now, and have been loving all the new HTML5 experiments he puts onto his blog. But I’m still not sold on HTML5.
http://mrdoob.com/projects/multiuserpad/
The concept of HTML5 is good, that an open source format without restrictions can work on any browser, any platform, and not require a lot of additional content to be downloaded, and for objects to be tagged and trigger videos, or photos through those tags. The problem I’m finding is that a lot of HTML5 doesn’t even work on an iPad or iPhone. Even though Mr. Jobs is putting his foot down, and trying to kill flash. It still seems to run better than HTML5, and work on more platforms, and browsers.
http://www.craftymind.com/factory/html5video/CanvasVideo.html
I’m not saying HTML5 won’t be the successor one day. But it’s going to be a while yet. That being said, when it does fully arrive and is supported by all browsers, and platforms. How are users going to prevent pop-ups if they have so much versatility now. Think of pop-up ads and banners with HTML5, as “The Wilderness Downtown” illustrates, pop up windows can move around. There was even an HTML5 example of pop-ups playing ping pong.
As cool as this is, I’ve been victim to pop-ups before, especially in Internet Explorer Days. Just wondering how the users of the future will be able to prevent this intelligent pop-ups? Is the catch that HTML5 can’t have commercial pop-ups? Or will it get even more aggressive, and the user experience of web browsing diminish? Or am I getting too paranoid? Guess we’ll have to wait and see.
http://mrdoob.com/projects/chromeexperiments/depth_of_field/
Other Links:
http://www.chromeexperiments.com/
-Scott
I’ve been working on a side project using MOGRAPH 2 to have objects fly in from outside of the web browser screen and land into a banner at the head of the page. The thing I’m trying to do differently is have the motion fly behind the page content. I’ve found it really annoying and frustrating when there is an expandable or rich media that is being intrusive and hard to close, when all you want to see is the latest news or content of a page. I will be finishing off the renders in the next couple of weeks, and should have an online version for people to try out. Enjoy the boards for now.
-Scott
Utilizing Photoshop and After Effects, we created a web ad that shows the process of the exceptional Absolut Bottle
[youtube clip_id="c7IObTYPb8Y"]
-Scott
Using an existing plane from a print and email campaign, we were able to create a Proof of Concept for an expandable web banner. This ‘POC’ can work with both flash coding, and html5.
[youtube clip_id="tAeTYi5KX8g"]