One of the exciting attributes of digital media is the ability to combine and recombine exisiting work into new forms. The ability to rapidly remix images, audio, video and text has unleashed scores of fun new tools that can enhance instruction and provide platforms for digital exposition and storytelling.
This year's ETUG workshop has set aside time and lab space for participants to explore how web-based tools can quickly unleash the mad creative artist that lurks within us. The mashup lab is intended to offer a guided, no-risk environment to colour outside the lines and take some chances.
We will use Alan Levine's 50 Ways to Tell a Story as our framework. We will focus on a smaller subset of these tools for on-site demonstration and support, but you are welcome to employ any other tool that you wish. Perhaps you have images, sound or video clips that evoke the theme of 'creativity' to you. If so, please bring either the files or the URLs where they can be found. If you prefer to start from scratch, be prepared to explore the vast stores of freely-licensed open educational resources that are available on the web -- just waiting for a good mashing.
We are taking something of a leap with this activity - the outcome of all this is unknown. Perhaps a collaborative artifact of our time together on Granville Island will emerge. Maybe not. But we are determined to have fun and to get a sense of what it means to manipulate media with the new generation of mixing tools.
A few examples:
Balancing Act - Barbara Ganley
My house as a movie set - Dean Shareski's demo of VoiceThread, which allows easy audio and textual annotation of images.
Oral Histories of Route 66 and "found" urban public gardens in Vancouver - Google Maps
Tell a story by linking Flickr images via notes
Blabberize - stupid, but kind of fun
Mediated Cultures - Michael Wesch using Netvibes, aggregation as mashuo
Grassroots videos on YouTube
Friday Morning keynote timelapse
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