Thursday, April 29, 2010

Advice

Do all the homework all the time. Even the blogs assignments. It will really help buffer your grade.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Website Favorites

One of my favorite student websites was Erin Dooley's. I like how she created an entire website that functioned as an interactive resume. It not only gave the necessary information about her abilities and experiences, but also presented it in a form which showcased those skills and abilities. I also lived that you figured out how to embed a video into a website and I liked the design of your homepage picture. Another website I liked was by CJ Robinson. I liked the continual consistency in his layouts, which made it look very professional. I loved the blue colored tigers and found that they made each page go with the next. A third website I liked was John Nathan's. I liked how he decided to have a website about critiquing his favorite sports teams, which made his website stand out. He also had very professional pictures and designed the texts around them in a professional manor.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Website

Please visit my website at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~clewis.

Making a professional looking website was relatively easier than I thought it would be. I sort of cheated and avoided using either Komposer or Expression Web by designing all of my webpages in Photoshop Elements and pasting it into Expression Web as a picture. I am most proud of the background/navbar that I designed for all my pages. My favorite page that I designed was the Trinity Life page, just because I loved how the text and pictures balanced out on the page. I would like to have had more information per page, since the text size of the body paragraphs are somewhat overwhelming and it would've looked lovely in a collumn format. My biggest technical challenge was inserting a thumbnail picture after I did the majority of the website in Photoshop. I had to use layers in Expression Web to put it on top of the main page. My biggest design challenge is making it look nice and be readable with a longer horizonatal page than verticle. Part of the reason I wish I had thought to put the text into collumns is to make my website more readable with the long horizontal layout. I already sent my website to my mom, who will probably show it off to mutual family and friends. As long as I have photoshop, I would consider doing another website for another class.

Monday, April 12, 2010

HTML Code

Even though programs like Expression Web and Kompozer make it easy for everyone to create their own websites without ever dealing with the HTML code, it is still more beneficial than not to know HTML code and how to manipulate it. Knowing HTML code makes it easy to name specific dimensions and format, that would be hard to reproduce with only the visual side of the website. Knowing HTML code also makes it easy for you to dissect another person's website that you like and figure out how they produced the graphics or font. One can also go in and take out whole chunks of HTML code out of another person's website and insert it into your own. Also if something goes wrong, sometimes the easiest solution is to look under the hood of the website and find the problem that way.

Pictures That Lie: Love-War


I chose to manipulate a picture of a B-52 Stratofortess airplane dropping bombs during the Vietnam war. The picture was originally from an image gallery on the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and I liked the original picture because of the scattered and detailed bombs in the picture, which made it easy to move and manipulate the individual bombs in the picture. The main manipulation of the picture was using the magic selection tool and copy/paste to move the bombs into a subtle heart shape in the middle of the bomb-dropping area. The clone tool was used to remove nearby bombs to make the heart more distinctive. Finally, the hue and saturation was adjusted to bring a light, barely-noticable red tone to the original black/white photo. The manipulated photo is a commentary on the slightly oxymoron about how peace is garenteeded through war and force. The jutaposition of the heart and the bombs with help to excepify this seemingly controdictory statement that a country's safety is dependent on it's ability to threaten and force its neighbors to coorperate with it. The heart is also a nod to the protests in the United States which ended the Vietnam War with out our success. I don't think my manipulation was particualary harmful, since it was first off pretty obviously manipulated because the probability of bombs making a heart shape is very low. Also I chose to manipulate an event that has already been closed in our history. If I had chose to manipulate photos from the Iraq War in a similar way, it would be more harmful since the people can still be manipulated into believeing one thing or another, such as the Lcpl Boudreaux case, where a picture of him and some Iraqi children holding a "Welcome Marines" sign was manipulated into saying negative things about the military. Though probably a joke in the internet community, the altered photo resulted in the Pentagon investigating Boudreax and his job coming into question (Casimiro).

Works Cited:
Casimiro, Steve. "Seeing Is Not Believing." Popular Science 267.4 (2005): 70-98. Academic Search Complete. EBSCO. Web. 12 Apr. 2010.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Presentation Favorites

One of my favorite presentations was Erin Dooley's presentation about Tiger TV. I just loved how she was able to personalize the presentation by making it about a Trinity-created institution. Though I had absolutely no interest in television and news at all, i was very intrigued and impressed by the Tiger TV technology. I especially liked the use of pictures from the Tiger TV website. Erin was also every enthusiastic about her choice, making what would've been a somewhat-boring presentation to me (career- and interest-wise) into something fascinating to learn about. I actually never knew Tiger TV was on cable, which is pretty awesome, or that it was so easy to become involved in the network.

Another presentation is was very fond of was Taylor Stratton's presentation about being an ophthalmologist. I was most impressed by the high quality pictures and the extremely professional layout design. The requirements and other information were also excellent and very detailed. The video at the end showing the animation of a part of an eye surgery was captivating, and helped to show some of the general jobs of an ophthalmologist. Though I have no interest in the medical field, I still found Taylor's presentation to be very engaging.