Sunday, January 29, 2017

R2 Blog Response

            One form of crowdsourcing that I am particularly familiar with is crowdfunding. I am an entrepreneurship and innovation minor, so funding is one of the main focuses of the curriculum. Crowdfunding can be useful with projects of all sizes and goals. Every bit of capital made can help a business and project expand, but it is important to follow through with any promises made during the campaign. If this is not done, then the company appears unreliable and unprofessional. Crowdsourcing any artistic project makes for a unique and interesting end result because of the diversity of entries and contributors.

            Throughout high school and in most of my college courses, all of my teachers have told my classmates and I to never use Wikipedia. They claimed the information was unreliable and random people could write whatever they want on the articles. After watching this video…that is not so true. Although it is a crowdsourced online encyclopedia, it is aggressively monitored by editors. Every new post has to get approved, and it states on the website whether a source was provided or not for the information listed. Understandably, it is not a scholarly source; however, after watching this TED talk, it seems Wikipedia is actually a good place to at least begin research or to become familiar with a new topic.

            I found Aaron Koblin’s air traffic interactive map to be amazing. I have never thought much about all the airplanes that are flying around the country and world at any given time. According to Koblin, in the United States the number is 140,000 at all times. That is a lot of air traffic to keep up with. Seeing the time lapse of the map emphasizes the different time zones in the United States, and it also shows where the major cities are. New York City was the most active airport location for leaving the country on the east coast. On the west, Los Angeles had the most activity. This makes complete sense, since they are huge cities for business and tourism.

           

            

Sunday, January 22, 2017

R1 Response

R1 Blog Response
            I always had these thoughts and visualizations in my head that were hard to explain out loud, but after reading about synesthesia it made a little more sense. Would I say I am a synesthete? I am not sure. Probably not but I do know to solve math problems I typically use words to get to the answer and visualize a timeline in my head. This may be because English and social studies were always my strong subjects, and I am a visual learner, but I related this to the topic of synesthesia.
           
           While watching the Evan Grant: Making Sound Visible through Cymatics video, I immediately pictured water speakers as soon as he described the topic. As the bass gets stronger the water jets up higher in the speaker and the colors change. When the bass is not as strong, the water stays lower and jumps to the beat. The water and color is illustrating the music just as Grant’s examples were illustrating the sounds and frequencies. Another example that comes to mind is the image that would display in the early 2000’s version on Windows Media Player. As the beats accelerates the image’s shape would morph and change color. It was mesmerizing to watch as a child.

          
         Daniel Tammet discusses how each number has a shape to him. This stood out to me of everything he talked about in the video. It is intriguing how different one human’s brain can work compared to another. As I discussed earlier, I visualize a timeline and use words to solve math problems. Tammet sees images instead of any numbers at all. Each visual in his head represents a number to him which is never something I would have thought of nor could I use those images to solve a numerical problem. On the other hand, people like my father (who is a literal genius), can easily solve math problems without putting much thought into it. The associations our brains make is unique and a lot of the time ineffable. This is something to consider when creating juxtapositions in film and other art forms.